In 1782,
Nicodemus the Hagiorite and
Macarius of Corinth published an anthology of teachings from Christian spiritual masters of the 4th through 15th centuries, which was called the
Philokalia. The
Philokalia was compiled from manuscripts that were available to Nicodemus at
Vatopedi and other monasteries on
Mount Athos. The book was initially published in
Venice with the title "Philokalia of the Sacred Neptic Ones" (). The writings of Peter of Damascus, which exist in this anthology, were first translated from Greek to
Slavonic by
Paisius Velichkovsky and have since been translated into many more languages. Notably,
Theophan the Recluse's Russian translation of the
Philokalia, called the
Dobrotoliubie, omits the writings of Peter, probably because they had been translated into Russian earlier by hieromonk Juvenal Polovtsev at
Optina Hermitage (who subsequently became the archbishop of
Vilnius,
Lithuania).
Manuscripts Of the 107 known manuscripts that contain writings attributed to Peter of Damascus, most have been edited and subsumed into the two books of Peter which exist in the
Philokalia, making him the largest author by size after
Maximus the Confessor and taking up a large portion of volume three. According to Jean Gouillard, the division of manuscripts between the two books of Peter in the
Philokalia is as follows:
Book 1 manuscripts • Vatican City, Bibliotheca Apostolica Vaticana, Pal. gr. 210 (13th century) • Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Ancien gr. 1134 (14th century) • Oxford, Bodleian, Barocc. 133 (14th century) • Athos, M. Iberon, Ms gr. 700 (14th century) • Moscow, Gostudarstvennyi Istoricheskii Muzei, Sinod. gr. 420 and 421 (15th century)
Book 2 manuscripts • Athos, M. Lauras, Ms gr. K 125 (15th century) • Athos, M. Lauras, Ms gr. Λ 24 (16th century) • Athos, Sk. Annes 8 (17th century) • Athos, M. Staur., Ms gr. 92 (17th century)
Structure As mentioned before, Peter's writings in the
Philokalia are divided into two major books that offer a wide array of practical spiritual advice. In the words of Nicodemus of Hagiorite, Peter's writings are "a recapitulation of holy watchfulness... a circle within a circle, a concentrated
Philokalia within the more extended
Philokalia." •
Book 1: A Treasury of Divine Knowledge • Introduction • The Seven Forms of Bodily Discipline • The Seven Commandments • The Four Virtues of the Soul • Active Spiritual Knowledge • The Bodily Virtues as Tools for the Acquisition of the Virtues of the Soul • The Guarding of the Intellect • Obedience and Stillness • The Eight Stages of Contemplation • The First Stage of Contemplation • The Second Stage of Contemplation • The Third Stage of Contemplation • The Fourth Stage of Contemplation • The Fifth Stage of Contemplation • The Sixth Stage of Contemplation • The Seventh Stage of Contemplation • The Eighth Stage of Contemplation • That there are No Contradictions in Holy Scripture • The Classification of Prayer according to the Eight Stages of Contemplation • Humility • Dispassion • A Further Analysis of the Seven Forms of Bodily Discipline • Discrimination • Spiritual Reading • True Discrimination • That we should not Despair even if we Sin Many Times • Short Discourse on the Acquisition of the Virtues and on Abstinence from the Passions • How to Acquire True Faith • That Stillness is of Great Benefit to those Subject to Passion • The Great Benefit ofTrue Repentance • God's Universal and Particular Gifts • How God has done All Things for our Benefit • How God's Speech is not Loose Chatter • How it is Impossible to be Saved without Humility • On Building up the Soul through the Virtues • The Great Value of Love and of Advice given with Humility • That the Frequent Repetition found in Divine Scripture is not Verbosity • Spurious Knowledge • A List of the Virtues • A List of the Passions • The Difference between Thoughts and Provocations •
Book 2: Twenty-Four Discourses (which correspond to the twenty-four letters of the Greek alphabet) • Spiritual Wisdom • The Two Kinds of Faith • The Two Kinds of Fear • True Piety and Self-Control • Patient Endurance • Hope • Detachment • Mortification of the Passions • The Remembrance of Christ's Sufferings • Humility • Discrimination • Contemplation of the Sensible World • Knowledge of the Angelic Orders • Dispassion • Love • Knowledge of God • Moral Judgment • Self-Restraint • Courage • Justice • Peace • Joy • Holy Scripture • Conscious Awareness in the Heart
Editing The compilers of the
Philokalia slightly edited the writings of Peter, which although not altering the content of the text significantly, occasionally shorten it. As an example, the manuscript supplies the lines:{{Text and translation|Λέω όχι στη λαιμαργία και την πορνεία, για χάρη του αυτοκυριαρχίας. Και η ψυχή απωθείται από τα ίδια της τα μάτια, η επιθυμία για μυρωδιές. και περιττά λεφτά {{Text and translation|Λέω όχι στη λαιμαργία και στην πορνεία και στα περιττά χρήματα, αρκούμενος σε εδώ, σύμφωνα με τον Απόστολο.
Lists of virtues and passions Peter of Damascus provides two exhaustive lists of virtues (228 in total) and passions (298 in total). These lists exist in book one of the
Philokalia. == Select quotations ==