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MYSTAGOGY

MYSTAGOGY
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J.Sanidopoulos
This weblog offers insights and analysis on various matters of life and thought from a 21st century Orthodox Christian perspective, among other things.
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      • Sermon for Holy Wednesday
      • The Central Message of Holy Wednesday
      • The Lord Comes To His Voluntary Passion
      • The Many Dresses of Kassiani
      • The Bridegroom of the Church
      • "Bring More Evils Upon Them, O Lord"
      • Saint John of the Ladder
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      • St. Romanos the Melodist on Palm Sunday
      • Palm Sunday in Bulgaria
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      • Saint Eustratius of the Near Kiev Caves Monastery
      • The Near Death Experience of Saint Taxiotis
      • Passover To Pascha
      • Finding a Shared Date for Easter Falls Flat With C...
      • Is the Date of Easter Related to Passover?
      • Russian Government Proposes Orthodox Holiday
      • 1/4 of Republicans Say Obama May Be Antichrist
      • Templeton Prize Is Bad News For Religion, Not Scie...
      • Greek Church Agrees To Pay Tax
      • Jesus On Screen
      • The Tomb of Lazarus
      • The Lazarus of the Parable and Lazarus who was Fou...
      • Fasting Rules For Annunciation and Palm Sunday
      • The Roman Revolt of 1821
      • Kings College To Relaunch Its Center for Hellenic ...
      • Passover Proof Lies In Egyptian Hieroglyphs
      • Archbishop Hieronymos: "I Get Payed 2300 Euros Per...
      • Churches Desecrated In Cyprus, Turned Into Pubs
      • The Taxation of Church Property In Greece
      • The Philanthropy of the Church of Greece
      • Church of Greece To Challenge the New Tax
      • Sermon for the Fifth Friday of Great Lent
      • On Discussing Matters Pertaining to Faith
      • Orthodox Saints of Ukraine
      • The Annunciation of the Virgin Mary
      • A Greek or a Roman Revolution?
      • Restoration of Autocephaly of Georgian Orthodoxy
      • Movie: "Papaflessas"
      • Homily on the Feast of the Annunciation
      • Neptic and Social Theology
      • Religion and the Science of Virtue
      • The History of Glenn Beck's 'Social Justice'
      • Murderer of Hieromonk Grigory Yakovlev Killed By B...
      • Was Easter Borrowed From a Pagan Holiday?
      • The Funeral of Elder Moses of Hilandari Monastery
      • Icon of the Mother of God of "the Uncut Mount"
      • A Miracle in the Monastery of the Kiev Caves
      • Pedophiles, Europe and the Church
      • Archbishop of Cyprus Visits For First Time Saint A...
      • Sermon for the Fifth Wednesday of Great Lent
      • Fasting and Science
      • A Thought Provoking Forum
      • Saint Basil of Mangazeya: The 12 Year Old Martyr
      • Holy Martyr Nikon and the 190 Monks With Him
      • Morality or Moralism?
      • Lausanne Doesn’t Limit Bartholomew’s Title
      • Seeking the Pearl of Great Price
      • The World's Only Immortal Animal
      • A Lutheran Pastor’s Account of Romanian Suffering
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      • Holy New Martyr Euthymios of Peloponnesos
      • Patriarch Kirill On Social Justice and Guatemala
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      • The Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim Explained
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      • Patrologia Graeca Online
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      • Beware of Demonic Biblical Exegesis
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      • Your Brain During the Great Fast
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      • The Three Laws of Thought
      • The Russian Church and the Romanov's Remains
      • A Hymn to Constantinople
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      • Rev. Dr. Dumitru Popescu Passed Away
      • "In the Midst of That Night, In My Darkness"
      • St. Gregory Dialogos Addresses Pastoral Care
      • Documentary Preview About St. Nikolai Velimirovich...
      • God Guides the Humble
      • What the Devil is Going On At the Vatican?
      • Christians Urged to Boycott Glenn Beck
      • Jewish Sites Only Recognized Holy Sites in Israel
      • Khirbet Qeiyafa Identified as Biblical 'Neta'im'
      • Myths About Vulnerability of Amazon Rain Forests
      • Sermon for the Fourth Friday of Great Lent
      • The Lives of the Four Evangelists
      • Saint Pionius the Hieromartyr
      • Salvation Requires God's Grace and Human Effort
      • The Rise of Orthodoxy in Guatemala
      • The Fall of Greece
      • Lent—Why Bother? For Spiritual Exercise
      • Marriage Contracts Prepare A Family to Divorce
      • An Actual Tree of Life
      • Muslims Terrorizing Christian Girls in Iraq
      • The Grave Robber and the Living Dead Girl
      • The "Trash" of Papa-Fotis
      • And Why Do We Make Prostrations?
      • Saint Anastasia the Patrician of Alexandria
      • No Charges in Priest's Beating
      • Psychic Failures
      • Sermon for the Fourth Wednesday of Great Lent
      • Sermon for the Feast of the Forty Holy Martyrs
      • A Tour of Panagoulakis Hermitage in Kalamata
      • Xeropotamou Monastery and the Forty Holy Martyrs
      • Discovery of the Relics of the Forty Holy Martyrs
      • Gender Equality and Priestly Celibacy in the Catho...
      • St. Luke of Crimea: Science and Religion
      • A Tour of St. Irene Chrysovalantou Monastery in Ly...
      • Adam's Lament
      • Why Galileo Was Wrong, Even Though He Was Right
      • The Desperation of the Multiverse Theory
      • 'Mystical' Stone Puts Plumber On New Path
      • Icon of Virgin Mary Weeps In France
      • Idle Chit Chat Can Make You Unhappy
      • Lost Jewish Tribe 'Found in Zimbabwe'
      • Sermon for the Third Sunday of Great Lent
      • An Evolving Alphabet
      • Do Not Let The Passions Take Root
      • "The Life In Christ" by Fr. John Romanides
      • Monastery of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem
      • Joel Osteen: The New Face of Christianity
      • Interview With Papa-Foti Lavriotis
      • Alex Jones Talks About Greek Crisis
      • 42 Martyrs of Ammoria in Phrygia
      • Egyptian Court Acquits Muslim Who Beheaded a Chris...
      • Elder Theoklitos Dionysiatis Answers American Pilg...
      • Asceticism and Its Fruits
      • Papa-Fotis the "Fool For Christ" Has Reposed
      • Why the Seemingly Educated Abandon Christianity
      • Sermon for the Third Friday of Great Lent
      • US Congress Acknowledges Armenian "Genocide"
      • Satanism In The Vatican?
      • Byzantine Ghost Towns of Syria
      • The Polemical Nature of Theology
      • Orthodox Mission to Sierra Leone: The Wounded Lion...
      • Recent Miracles of St. Gerasimos of Jordan
      • St. Gerasimos of Jordan Monastery (Documentary)
      • The Philosophy of Men Does Not Satisfy
      • Serb Film Director Regrets Humanity's Lost Spiritu...
      • Atheism, Not God, is Odd
      • Metropolis of Boston Responds to Plastic Spoon Con...
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      • The Unknown Maiden
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      • Another Patriarch Gives A Koran As A Gift!
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      • Sharon Osbourne: The Dark Side of Fame
      • Christian Gets Life in Prison for Blasphemy
      • Atheists Urge To Trade Bibles For Porn
      • The Legacy of John Cassian in East and West
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Saturday, March 27, 2010

Passover To Pascha


On the Origins of the Primary Feast of the Christian Church

by William J. Tighe

For all Christians today who observe a “liturgical year,” the high point of that year is the annual commemoration of Christ’s passion, death, and resurrection at the end of Holy Week. Good Friday recalls to the faithful the Lord’s suffering and death, and in most Christian traditions is a day of ascetical practices, particularly fasting. Holy Saturday commemorates his entombment and descent to hell, and thus is also a day of asceticism. Easter Sunday, by contrast, is the joyous celebration of his resurrection, and of the resurrection of mankind in him.

Despite these discrete “episodes,” however, most Christian churches or denominational traditions have not completely lost track of the ancient sense that what we commemorate in the course of these three days is a process rather than separate events: the Lord’s “passing over” from life through death to new and eternal life, as both a realization and a promise to those who, by faith and baptism, have been incorporated into Christ. How and when the Church came to observe this annual “feast of feasts” has long been a matter of dispute, and in recent decades the areas of disagreement have grown greater—or at least a longstanding scholarly consensus has been strongly challenged.

“Easter” is, of course, an English word, and one lacking the multivalence of the more widespread term “Pascha.” This term, which has different forms in different languages, derives ultimately from the Hebrew Pesach, or “Passover,” and thus can mean both “Easter” specifically and more generally the “triduum” of Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Sunday.

Dating the Crucifixion

It appears, based on a variety of historical and astronomical considerations (including the lunar cycles determining the dating of Passover every year) that the Lord’s crucifixion could have occurred only on either Friday, April 7, A.D. 30, or Friday, April 3, A.D. 33. And if the fulfillment of Joel’s prophecy that “the sun shall be turned into darkness and the moon into blood” (Joel 2:31) at Christ’s death, to which St. Peter referred in Acts 2:20, came about (as scholars such as F. F. Bruce have held) through a khamsin dust storm from the Arabian desert both darkening the sun and turning an eclipsed moon visible from Jerusalem blood-red, the date can be further narrowed to A.D. 33. No such lunar eclipse would have been visible from Jerusalem in A.D. 30, but one would have been visible there on April 3, 33.

The Jews, of course, did not follow the Roman solar calendar, but their own lunar calendar, and in that calendar, Passover fell in the month of Nisan (corresponding to our March/April), which was also the first month of the year in their reckoning of religious festivals. From the four Gospels it is not clear whether the Crucifixion fell on the Eve of Passover, as the Gospel of John states (in which case its Jewish date would have been Friday, 14 Nisan), or on Passover Day itself, as the synoptic Gospels appear to witness, (in which case it would have fallen on Friday, 15 Nisan). In the former case, the Last Supper would not have been a Passover meal, while in the latter it would.

Others have argued, on rather slender evidence, that the Lord and his disciples followed the Qumran Essene calendar (the Essenes were a sectarian Jewish group that rejected any connection with the Jerusalem Temple and its priests), in which case they would have celebrated a Passover meal on Tuesday evening, with the Lord’s arrest occurring early on Wednesday morning, followed by a two-day interrogation and trial process culminating with his crucifixion on Friday, 14 Nisan, the Eve of Passover in the “official calendar.”

Passages such as “Christ our Passover has been sacrificed for us” (1 Cor. 5:7) may give further support to the likelihood of a 14 Nisan date for the Crucifixion, and it seems that, with a few exceptions (like Tertullian and St. Cyprian), most early Christians followed or assumed the Johannine chronology.

Sunday versus 14 Nisan

It is fairly well known that there was a major controversy throughout the Church in the second century about the keeping of Pascha (as we shall call it from here on). It has generally been supposed that this controversy concerned the date on which the celebration should culminate, that is, whether it should be on a Sunday, after, perhaps immediately after, the Jewish Passover, or whether it should be on whatever day of the week might be deemed the Christian equivalent of the Jewish 14 Nisan. It is because of the significance to them of the latter date that its proponents were termed Quartodecimans (“Fourteenthers”).

Certainly these were the alternatives when the controversy erupted in a big way early in the pontificate of Pope Victor (A.D. 189–199). There is some indication that the controversy stemmed from difficulties between the Roman Church and a group of Asian Christians at Rome, who, although in “peace and communion” with the Roman Church, had been allowed up to that point to celebrate Pascha according to their own reckoning. But a major church conflict arose after the pope sent letters to Catholic bishops throughout the Mediterranean world soliciting their views about the proper practice.

Synods of bishops met in different regions to consider the question. Most of them—in Italy, Gaul, North Africa, Egypt, Palestine, Mesopotamia, and elsewhere—declared themselves for the Sunday Pascha (even though all of these churches did not follow the same methods of computing it, which meant that in some years different regions might observe it on different Sundays). But those in Roman Asia (meaning today’s Asia Minor or the greater part of Asiatic Turkey), who acknowledged the primacy of Ephesus and its then bishop, Polycrates, indicated their resolve to maintain their Quartodeciman Pascha, which they declared had been handed down to them originally by the Apostle John.

Pope Victor then proceeded to excommunicate the Asiatic churches, despite the pleas of St. Irenaeus of Lyons, who wrote a letter urging him to withhold, or perhaps withdraw, the excommunication. How events played out after this point—whether the Asians submitted, or Pope Victor withdrew his excommunication (and, if so, whether unconditionally or as the result of a compromise)—is unknown due to the lack of surviving information. But by the time the Council of Nicaea condemned the Quartodeciman Pascha in 325, it seems to have been observed only by “fringe groups” in Asia and to have become unknown elsewhere.

Something Not Observed

However, the bitter quarrel between Pope Victor and the Asian churches had a prehistory of some length, and it is here that the scholarly consensus has “destabilized” over the past quarter-century. At some point, seemingly towards the end of his long life, the aged Polycarp, bishop of Smyrna, paid a visit to Rome. This was in the time of Pope Anicetus, whose pontificate is traditionally dated from about A.D. 150 to about 168. According to Irenaeus (whose letter to Pope Victor some twenty to thirty years later is the source for this information), Polycarp and Anicetus had disagreed on several matters, including Pascha observance, but when each failed to persuade the other of the superiority of his church’s custom, they agreed not to quarrel. As a gesture of respect for his visitor, the pope allowed Polycarp to celebrate the Eucharist, presumably the principal or only Sunday service for the Roman Christians.

Irenaeus’s argument against Pope Victor’s action against the Asian churches involved not only the example of Polycarp and Anicetus “agreeing to disagree” but also the claim that they had been “more opposed” to one another in their dispute than were Victor and the Asians. Yet in spite of their differences in practice, they had lived in peace, sharing the same faith. As Irenaeus wrote to Victor,

"Among these were the presbyters before [Pope] Soter, who presided over the church which you now rule. We mean Anicetus, Pius, Hyginus, Telesphorus and Xystus. They neither observed themselves, nor did they permit those with them to do so. And yet although not observing, they were nonetheless at peace with those who came to them from the parishes which observed, although this observance was more opposed to those who did not observe. But none were ever cast out on account of this matter, but the presbyters before you who did not observe sent the Eucharist to those of other parishes who observed."

What Irenaeus appears to be saying is that the Roman bishops from Xystus through Anicetus, that is, from about 117 to about 168, did not observe something, but were nevertheless at peace both with the Christians in Asia and with Asian congregations in Rome who observed the Quartodeciman Pascha. These bishops of Rome even sent portions of the consecrated elements from their own Eucharists to the Asiatic congregations in Rome (a custom of the Roman Church known as the fermentum).

What did these Roman bishops “not observe”? In Victor’s time they did not observe the Quartodeciman Pascha, observing instead the Sunday Pascha, but if this had been the case earlier on, before the time of Pope Soter (who was pope from about 168 to 175), it would be hard to know why their practices could be described as “more opposed” than those that occasioned the dispute in Victor’s time.

Such considerations have led many scholars to propose that the Roman Church prior to the time of Pope Soter did not observe any Pascha at all, and that it was the question of whether to observe it, not merely when to observe it, that underlay the inconclusive discussions between Polycarp and Anicetus when the former visited Rome. Subsequently, perhaps under Soter’s episcopate, the Roman Church did begin to celebrate an annual Sunday Pascha; thus (as Irenaeus seems to have argued), Victor and Polycrates were closer to one another in practice than Anicetus and Polycarp had been.

The Transformed Passover

Such a radical solution goes against the longstanding belief, or assumption, that the annual celebration of the Lord’s passion, death, and resurrection was both primordial and universal among Christians, but it is a hypothesis that makes sense of a good deal of scattered information. At the same time, it illustrates the mutual influence of Jewish and gentile Christians upon one another in the century or so after the apostles and their generation passed from the scene.

Although his own observance of Jewish festivals was a matter of some interest to St. Paul (Acts 20:16, 1 Cor. 16:8), and his instruction of converts would no doubt have included much about the sacrifice of “Christ our Passover” (1 Cor. 5:7), it is not at all clear that the churches Paul founded (as well as churches of “another man’s foundation” such as the Church of Rome) that were primarily gentile in composition would initially have observed any temporal cycle beyond the weekly commemoration of the Lord’s Resurrection on Sunday morning, perhaps as the climax of a night-long vigil. For it was not annually, but “as often as” the Eucharist is celebrated that the memorial of Christ’s death and proclamation of his resurrection is made (1 Cor. 11:26).

It is, however, virtually certain that the Jewish Christians of the apostolic generation and beyond continued to observe the Passover festival, although it was now transformed by the commemoration, not only of deliverance from Egyptian bondage, but also from the greater bondage of sin and death, effected in Christ’s “passover” from death to life.

The Johannine Influence

In the course of the First Jewish Revolt of A.D. 66 to 73, which climaxed in the destruction of Jerusalem and its Temple in September 70, there was a great dispersal of Jewish Christians, along with other Jews. Although some Jewish Christians returned to the environs of Jerusalem after the revolt was suppressed, it appears that many of them dispersed to the cities of Asia Minor, many of which, notably Smyrna and Ephesus, had flourishing Jewish communities. Among the latter may have been the Apostle John and the Blessed Virgin Mary, who seem to have settled in or near Ephesus.

It would appear that this “post-Pauline Johannine influence”—if we may use the phrases loosely—may have resulted in an annual Christian observance of Pascha (in addition to the universal observance of Sunday as the “Day of Resurrection”) becoming a fixed feature of the churches in this region, even those initially founded or organized by St. Paul.

What was the Pascha that these Asiatic churches observed? It was a Pascha that commemorated the whole of the Lord’s redemptive activity—his incarnation, passion, death and resurrection—but whose celebration was centered on what was believed to be the anniversary of his death on the Cross, or its equivalent—hence the long tradition of deriving “Pascha” from the Greek verb paschein, meaning “to suffer.”

The Asian Pascha

What was the date? It was 14 Nisan, or rather what was deemed to be its equivalent in the Greek version of the Roman calendar that was adopted throughout the Hellenistic world towards the end of the last century before Christ. This was a solar, not a lunar calendar, but its months began nine days before those in the Roman calendar in the Latin West, and they had different names. The first month in this calendar, Artemision, the month in which the spring equinox occurred, ran from what would have been March 24 to April 22 in the Latin version of the calendar.

Artemision would have more or less coincided with the Jewish Nisan, but at least by A.D. 100, Christians and Jews had become so thoroughly estranged that Christians were no longer willing to follow the Jewish calendar, the more so after the determination of its festal dates, which had been the prerogative of the Temple priesthood, passed to the rabbinic assembly at Jamnia—a rabbinic assembly that was profoundly hostile to Christianity. So the Asian Christians (or the larger part of them—there appear to have been sectarian groups that followed other reckonings) simply took 14 Artemision as the equivalent of 14 Nisan, and celebrated the Lord’s Pascha on that date.

How did the Asians celebrate their Pascha? They undertook a severe fast on the day itself, continuing the fast through the night until cockcrow (about 3:00 A.M.), when it ended with the celebration of the Eucharist. This was not in any sense a “historical” commemoration of the Lord’s Resurrection, since (by modern reckoning) it would have spanned only two days, not three, as in the later triduum of Good Friday, Holy Saturday, and Easter Sunday. Rather, it was a Christian adaptation and reorientation of the Jewish Passover to commemorate the entirety of the redemption accomplished in Christ, from his incarnation through his death to his resurrection and ascension.

(The prolongation of fasting through the night to cockcrow should probably be seen as an instance of Christians fasting while Jews feasted, fasting on behalf of the Jewish people who had, as the early Christians saw it, “missed their moment” when their leaders handed over Christ to the Romans to be crucified, and it was probably the origin of the later Christian insistence that Easter had always to come after the Jewish Passover.)

The Sunday Pascha

The Sunday celebration of Pascha may have been introduced at Rome in the 160s, under Pope Soter. It probably did not originate there, though, but rather, as Karl Holl first suggested, in Jerusalem, where the permanent barring, under pain of death, of any circumcised male from the new Roman city founded by the Emperor Hadrian around 135, after the suppression of the Bar Kochba Revolt, destroyed the Jewish Christian church that had survived there up to that point, and resulted in its supersession by a wholly gentile church. Later on, when the Palestinian bishops met to support Pope Victor’s insistence on the Sunday Pascha, they noted that it had long been their custom to exchange letters with the Church of Alexandria so that they and the Egyptian Christians might observe Pascha on the same Sunday.

At first, this Sunday Pascha followed the pattern of that of the Asians; that is, Saturday was treated as the equivalent of 14 Nisan, with a daylong fast ending far into the night, and culminating with the Eucharist early on Sunday morning. Locating its culmination on Sunday morning, however, would have made it an exceptionally festive annual “magnification” of the normal Sunday celebration of the Resurrection, and it would not be long before the commemoration would be extended backwards to include Friday, as the day of the week on which Christ suffered. This would have been all the more easily done, since Fridays, like Wednesdays, had been weekly fast days since the apostolic era, as indicated in the Didache.

In most Christian traditions today, and in all that predate the Reformation, Good Friday is a strict fast day, while Holy Saturday is a less strict one. But as Irenaeus, Hippolytus, and Tertullian all witness, early on the contrary was the case: the Saturday Paschal fast was regarded as more strictly binding than that of the preceding Friday. Nevertheless, by the early decades of the third century, both days were fast days oriented towards the Paschal celebration on Sunday morning.

By the middle of that same century, as the Didascalia Apostolorum and other contemporary evidence indicate, in some Eastern regions, notably Syria and Egypt, the pre-Paschal fast had been extended back to the beginning of what is now Holy Week, seemingly on the basis of a survival of an echo of the ancient Essene calendar that would have had the Lord eat the Passover with his disciples on Tuesday evening, as the Didascalia itself claims. This backwards extension was the origin of the Eastern separation of the Paschal fast of Holy Week from the preceding fast of Great Lent by the weekend of Lazarus Saturday and Palm Sunday, while its absence in Rome was what caused the Roman Church, when it adopted the forty-day Lent in the fourth century, to terminate it on Maundy Thursday, with the sacred triduum immediately following it.

Fifty Days of Rejoicing

Among both the Quartodecimans and the Sunday observers alike, the Paschal celebration was followed by a fifty-day period of uninterrupted rejoicing, during which both fasting and kneeling in prayer were strictly forbidden, and although there is some fourth-century evidence that a few churches highlighted the week after Easter Sunday, most made no such distinction. Canon 20 of the Council of Nicaea in 325 “codified” this prohibition on kneeling during these fifty days.

The period itself was not a Christian invention, but rather an adaptation of the Jewish festal period of seven weeks plus one day after Passover, called Shabuoth, or “weeks” for Christian purposes. On the final, fiftieth day, the Jewish festival climaxed in a celebration of the giving of the Law and of the covenants God had made with Noah, Abraham, and Moses.

The Christian version ended with a simultaneous celebration of both the Ascension and the gift of the Holy Spirit. By the end of the fourth century, however, Christ’s ascension was increasingly coming to be celebrated on the fortieth day of this period, often preceded by a fast day and usually followed by the resumption of normal Wednesday and Friday fasting—the last a matter of some controversy and a development long resisted in both Jerusalem and Egypt.

Jewish Roots Remain

In retrospect, the fixing of the Eucharistic culmination of Christian Pascha on Sunday probably ensured that it would slowly alter its nature from that of a Christianized Passover focusing on the redemption and deliverance effected in Christ, to a historical commemoration of the events by which they were wrought by Christ. All the other feasts of Christ throughout the year—the Annunciation, Christmas, Epiphany, the Ascension, and Pentecost, as well as Great Lent itself—arose in connection with, and with dates determined by, this “feast of feasts.”

No doubt this long process was attended by both benefits and drawbacks, too many to enumerate and too difficult to reckon. If there is any “lesson” to be learned from this process—apart from amazed contemplation of its complexity, and of the intricacy and subtlety of the manner in which Christianity both preserved and transformed so much of its Jewish matrix without repudiating it—it may be to caution those who, whether in blame or praise, highlight the “hellinization” of Christianity and its “loss” of its “Jewish roots.” In fact those roots, transformed as they have been, still live and undergird the liturgical cycles of historical Christianity.

Certainly, to give one concrete example, it does pose a question to those Christians who in recent decades have taken up the affectation of holding “Christian Seder meals,” all unaware that the Lord’s own final meal with his disciples (whether it was a Passover meal or not) has been perpetuated from the very beginnings of Christianity in the observances of Holy Week, and most especially in the Great Easter Vigil.

Sources include “Dating the Crucifixion” by Colin J. Humphreys and W. G. Waddington, in Nature Vol. 306, 22/29 December 1983, pp. 743–746; Stuart Hall, “The Origins of Easter,” in Studia Patristica 15/1 (1984), pp. 554–567; and especially The Origins of the Liturgical Year by Thomas J. Talley (1991 rev. ed.). A simpler and more condensed version of Talley’s views on the subject can be found in a collection of his articles and essays entitled Worship: Reforming Tradition (1990) as its ch. 6, “History and Eschatology in the Primitive Pascha.”


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Finding a Shared Date for Easter Falls Flat With Churches


March 26, 2010
Religion News Service
by Nicole Neroulias

Easter usually comes twice to the Kringas household in Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.: first with baskets of pastel eggs and a ham baked in the oven, then a week or more later with dark red eggs and lamb roasted on a spit.

Maureen Kringas, who splits her time between her mother's Catholic parish and her father's Greek Orthodox church, grew up attending both sets of Holy Week services, from Palm Sunday to midnight Mass on Holy Saturday.

Because Western (Catholic) and Eastern Orthodox Easter typically fall on different dates, it made for an extended Easter season for Kringas, now a 21-year-old nursing student.

When the Easter dates periodically share the same date, as they do for the next two years, interfaith families may struggle to sync their menu and worship options, but Kringas, for one, loves the result.

"I like to be able to mix and match the services, and at college, I only have time off for Catholic Easter," she explained. "It's so much easier when they're the same."

All the world's Christians will celebrate Easter this year on April 4 and on April 24 in 2011 -- a two-year East-West convergence that hasn't occurred since 1943 and won't happen again until 2037. The National Council of Churches has seized this as a chance to renew its call "to set a common date for the annual celebration of the most important event in Christian history," hoping to coax Eastern Orthodox traditionalists to budge on their calendar.

Orthodox churches use the old Julian calendar's equinox and lunar cycle calculations; Catholics and Protestants use the Gregorian method, adopted in the 16th century and the basis for the secular January-December year. (Isolated exceptions include Greece's Catholic minority that uses the state-approved Orthodox Easter date, and Finland's small Orthodox community that celebrates with the Protestant majority.)

In 1997, the World Council of Churches met in Aleppo, Syria, and proposed scientifically updating both calendars -- a compromise favored by the West, but still troublesome for the East.

"It is difficult, especially for the Orthodox churches, to change anything," said the Rev. Dagmar Heller, a German pastor who serves on the WCC's Faith and Order Commission and helped organize the 1997 conference in Syria. Calendar updates have caused schisms before, including 20th-century rifts when some branches of Orthodoxy moved their Christmas to Dec. 25 instead of the January date maintained in Russia and some other countries.

"There's a conviction that you just do not touch the calendar," said the Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky, ecumenical officer of the Orthodox Church in America. "Any attempt, even a perfectly appropriate one, in historical and theological terms, is interpreted at the popular level as an assault on tradition."

While the relatively young and small OCA seems more receptive to adopting the Aleppo plan than the Greek and Russian heavyweights, Kishkovsky's church won't act independently, he said.

Lewis Patsavos, a canon law professor at the Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, says Eastern church leaders will eventually be forced to update their calendar system, if only because their Easter Sunday will eventually start heading off course, into summer, in a few centuries.

"It's a scandal that the most important feast of the Christian church is celebrated by two different methods of calculation; any serious theologian understands that this cannot continue indefinitely," he said. "We really need to put our heads together and start seriously considering how to update this matter."

With dates converging four times in the next 10 years, there may be a shift in momentum toward establishing a common Christian calendar. The Catholic Church would welcome a return to the universal celebration of earlier centuries, said the Rev. Ron Roberson, ecumenical officer for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

"It would be ideal to celebrate together, as Christians," he said, adding that it would offer some practical benefits, such as establishing a common work holiday across the European Union, for example. "It's a very joyful thing when it happens two years in a row, and we certainly wish we could do it all the time."

Then again, there are some advantages to maintaining dueling calendars. Orthodox Christians working in the West may find it easier to get vacation days approved when they're not competing with Catholic and Protestant colleagues. In Jerusalem, crowding and security issues are far more manageable with two sets of Holy Weeks, especially when the dates also stray from Passover, Kishkovsky added.

And some people just like to be different.

"It might sound very silly, but for some people, this is what they see as making us distinct," Patsavos said. "We follow the letter of the law, though not necessarily the spirit."

With no compromise in sight, the Kringas family and other East-West clans will continue celebrating Easter twice. Maureen's mother, Patricia Kringas, says she prefers it this way, as long as the two Easters are far enough apart that Orthodox Palm Sunday doesn't run into Catholic Easter Sunday.

"When it's the same or too close together, you feel you're always going to shortchange one of them," she said.
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Is the Date of Easter Related to Passover?


The article seeks to answer the following questions:

1. How the date of Easter is calculated.

2. The relationship between the Christian celebration of Easter and the modern Jewish celebration of Passover.

3. The reason why Western Christians (Catholic and Protestant) and Eastern Christians (Orthodox) usually (though not always) celebrate Easter on different dates.

Read the article here.
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Russian Government Proposes Orthodox Holiday


Government Proposes Orthodox Holiday

22 March 2010
The Moscow Times

The government has proposed a new national holiday, Baptism of Rus Day, in what could be viewed as a victory of the Russian Orthodox Church in the clericalization of Russian life.

The government has submitted a bill to the State Duma that would introduce the Baptism of Rus Day on July 28, when Russian Orthodox believers commemorate Prince Vladimir, who christened Rus in 988, a Duma source told Itar-Tass on Friday.

Culture Minister Alexander Avdeyev proposed the holiday at a government meeting in February, supporting an idea voiced earlier by the church, Itar-Tass said.

The church has seen its clout grow in recent years. It has long pushed for the study of its doctrines in public schools, and next month, grade school students in 19 Russian regions will begin religious studies that focus on the four faiths labeled "traditional" in federal law: Russian Orthodoxy, Islam, Judaism and Buddhism, RIA-Novosti reported in early March.
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1/4 of Republicans Say Obama May Be Antichrist


Quarter of Republicans Think Obama May Be the Anti-Christ

LiveScience
25 March 2010

Americans have some extreme views of President Obama, with a new controversial survey suggesting that 40 percent of adults believe he is a socialist, and about a quarter of survey participants thinking the president is a racist, anti-American and even doing things Hitler did.

The whammy: 14 percent of Americans say President Barack Obama may be the Antichrist. When split by political party, 24 percent of Republicans and 6 percent of Democrats viewed the nation's leader in this way.

The results come from an online Harris Poll involving 2,320 adults who were surveyed online between March 1 and March 8 by Harris Interactive, a market research firm. Respondents were read each of 15 statements and asked whether they thought they were true or false. The sample of people was selected from among roughly 4 million people who agreed to participate in Harris Interactive surveys and are given "modest incentives," according to Harris. The results were then weighted to reflect the composition of the U.S. adult population. [Infographic Compares Views]

The accuracy of the poll has been questioned widely in the blogosphere. Polls are never free from error, with sampling bias and question types leading to flaws. Online polls, in particular, raise questions about bias.

"The thing about sampling is no sample avoids bias," said Humphrey Taylor, chairman of the Harris Poll, Harris Interactive. "The question is can you identify and correct for the biases that are in there. We have a sizable team that does that and nothing else."

Here's the percentage breakdown of respondents' views of President Obama:

38 percent say he wants to take away Americans' right to own guns.
32 percent say he is a Muslim.
29 percent think he wants to turn over the sovereignty of the United States to a one world government.
29 percent think he has done many things that are unconstitutional.
27 percent say he resents America's heritage.
27 percent say he does what Wall Street and the bankers tell him to do.
25 percent say he was not born in the United States and so is not eligible to be president.
25 percent say he is a domestic enemy that the U.S. Constitutions speaks of.
23 percent say he is a racist.
23 percent say he is anti-American.
23 percent say he wants to use an economic collapse or terrorist attack as an excuse to take dictatorial powers.
20 percent say he is doing many of the things that Hitler did.
When broken out by political party, results showed some stark differences. For instance, the majority of Republicans believed the president is a Muslim and a socialist, while around 40 percent believe he is a racist, someone who resents American heritage and "wants terrorists to win."

Forty percent of Republicans, compared with just 15 percent of Democrats, think Wall Street pulls his strings.

When Harris' Taylor saw the results he told LiveScience he was "flabbergasted. I would've guessed the numbers would've been a lot smaller than that."

He added, "It means that very large numbers of people are misninformed not only about President Obama but many things in modern life."

The findings lend support to, and in fact were done to verify, themes in John Avlon's new book "Wingnuts: How the Lunatic Fringe Is Hijacking America" (Beast Books, 2010).

"This poll should be a wake-up call to all Americans about the real costs of using fear and hate to pump up hyper-partisanship," Avlon said after reviewing the findings. "We are playing with dynamite by demonizing our president and dividing our country in the process. Americans need to remember the perspective that Wingnuts always forget – patriotism is more important than partisanship."

While extreme, there's a chance some respondents weren't even sure what a Muslim is, for instance. Research reported in 2008 suggested Americans have inaccurate views of Muslims: Many think the Islamic religion is associated with violence and religious extremism, and perhaps even terrorism. In addition, seven in 10 Americans in that study admitted they know very little about the Islamic religion.
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Templeton Prize Is Bad News For Religion, Not Science


25 March 2010
New Scientist
Michael Brooks

In his acceptance today of the £1 million Templeton prize for "an exceptional contribution to affirming life's spiritual dimension", evolutionary biologist Francisco Ayala forcefully denied that science contradicts religion.

"If they are properly understood," he said, "they cannot be in contradiction because science and religion concern different matters."

I don't believe this, and Ayala, a professor at the University of California, Irvine, should know better. Science is about finding out how the physical world works. The only way in which science and religion can "concern different matters" is if religion has absolutely nothing to do with the physical world occupied by its believers.

But - and here's the rub - that is exactly what Templeton "religion" is all about. Its efforts to find common ground between science and religion have systematically destroyed pretty much every religious claim. Little in the creed of the Presbyterian church, for example - of which the late John Templeton was a lifelong member - survives its axe.

When I attended a journalism fellowship funded by the Templeton Foundation in 2005, I learned from Templeton-endorsed scientists and theologians that the way to establish a peaceful co-existence of science and religion was to make no religious claims at all.

They said that creationism is out, as is intelligent design. There can be no afterlife. Nor does anyone have an eternal soul. There was no virgin birth - that was most probably a story made up after Mary was raped by a Roman soldier. There was no physical resurrection of Jesus. None of the miracles actually happened. And prayers are not answered.

This is Templeton version of religion. A stripped-down, vague and woolly notion that there is something "other" out there. It makes no claims beyond that.

Being so very vague and undefined puts the new Templeton religion comfortably beyond assault from questioners. But is it really religion? Not by any terms I am familiar with. I can't help thinking that Jack Templeton, the evangelical Christian head of the foundation, would agree.

Religion is surely defined as a belief system involving a specific set of ideas about what the universe is all about. By its efforts to validate religious belief in scientific terms, Templeton has actually stripped religion of all ideas, rendering it entirely pointless.

My advice? If you have a faith that is important to you, don't try to rationalise it. It's OK to be religious, believing that there's a purpose to the universe and that you have an insight into a hidden realm of knowledge. As neuroscientists and psychologists are discovering, that's actually the default human state.

But attempting to prove your religion is based on anything rational or scientific is a fool's errand. As the Templeton Foundation has rather self-defeatingly shown over the last few years, it just doesn't work because they actually do have overlapping concerns, whatever Ayala says.

What's more, you might just strip away your own faith in the process. Believe me.
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Greek Church Agrees To Pay Tax


Church Agrees To Pay Tax

March 27, 2010
Kathimerini

The Church of Greece said yesterday that it would not fight the government’s attempt to tax some of its operations after certain provisions in the recently tabled bill were watered down.

The Church’s Holy Synod met yesterday to discuss the government’s decision to impose various levies as part of its bid to increase revenues in the framework of efforts to reduce the public deficit.

“We have never refused, nor do we now refuse to be taxed,” said the Holy Synod in a statement. “The Church wants to find a way in which it can support the state in its efforts but which does not damage its humanitarian work, so that people can benefit.”

The government has proposed a 20 percent tax on the income that the Church makes from its real estate, which is estimated to be some 10 million euros a year. However, the Finance Ministry has accepted calls to accept as tax deductable the wages paid to personnel working for the Church and to factor in a 5 percent depreciation for buildings that are rented out for accommodation and 3 percent for those that are leased by businesses.

The government also conceded ground on the tax it wanted to impose on donations made to the Church. It had initially aimed to tax these at 10 percent for cash donations and 5 percent for any real estate that is gifted to the Church. However, this has been severely diluted, so the donations will be taxed at 0.1 and 0.5 percent respectively.

The Holy Synod said that it would submit a list of proposals to the Finance Ministry regarding its plans to tax the Church’s property and charity organizations but did not reveal what these suggestions would be.
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Jesus On Screen


Jesus On Screen: Movies That Tell Christ’s Story Have Always Been Popular

By Brian Murphy
THE STATE JOURNAL-REGISTER
Mar 24, 2010

Filmmakers just can’t resist going back to tell Jesus’ tale over and over.

The Bible has it all — murder, sex, lies, wars, plagues, redemption, forgiveness, pharaohs, love, hate, sibling rivalry. And you don’t have to pay royalties.

The New Testament gives us one of the most charismatic, fascinating figures in history. Whether or not you believe Jesus Christ’s story, Hollywood banks on the assumption that the tale of a man who turns the philosophies of various cultures upside down in just a few years — and then sacrifices his own life so that others may reap the benefits — is interesting.

The challenge, of course, is to find something new to say, or at least find a different way to tell the story that’s been told millions of times all over the world. Some people so revere the story of Jesus that anything less than a straightforward, worshipful retelling courts protests. Others, meanwhile, periodically desire a new way to hear the story because they’ve heard it so often.

So with Easter right around the corner, these are among the more prominent films that tell the story of Jesus. Most, if not all, should be available at your local video store, digital movie services or through the mail.

Singing Jesus

• “JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR” is the 1973 film version of the Andrew Lloyd Weber stage musical about the last weeks of Jesus’ life. The best-known song is “I Don’t Know How To Love Him,” a pop hit for the woman who played Mary Magdalene on stage and in the film, Yvonne Elliman (who later had a No. 1 single with “If I Can’t Have You”). True story: Ted Neeley, star of the film, plays Jesus in a touring production of the musical to this day.

• “GODSPELL” is the other 1973 film version of a popular stage musical about the end of Jesus’ life, with Victor Garber (“Alias”) as Jesus. The best-known song is “Day By Day,” which became a pop hit. The film version looks extremely dated now — hippies running around New York City — but the crucifixion scene is still moving.

Controversial Jesus

• “THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST” seems so obvious now that it has earned a gajillion dollars and showed that even non-evangelicals will turn out for a Christian movie — if it is of high quality (a stumbling block for many “Christian films” operating with tiny budgets and volunteer casts and crews). But you may remember before the premiere that everyone thought director Mel Gibson was nuts for making an extremely violent film about Jesus’ crucifixion.

• Among films that postulate that Jesus and Mary Magdalene were more than just friends, we have “THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST” (1988), Martin Scorsese’s take on the life of Jesus (Willem Dafoe) as more man than deity. Boy howdy, was there controversy at the time.

“THE DA VINCI CODE” (2006) doesn’t feature Jesus as a character, but he was an integral part of the story. The film adaptation of Dan Brown’s novel is about a group trying to protect a secret that could absolutely rock Christianity: Jesus and Mary Magdalene had a child whose descendants are still around today. Boy howdy, was there controversy at the time.

Televised Jesus

• “JESUS OF NAZARETH” (1977) and “JESUS” (2000) are both television miniseries about Jesus’ life. The “Nazareth” cast was loaded with stars — Christopher Plummer, James Earl Jones, Laurence Olivier, Anthony Quinn, Rod Steiger, Anne Bancroft ... the list goes on and on. Some people criticized the 2000 “Jesus” because it depicts Christ (“Law & Order’s” Jeremy Sisto) as someone who enjoys dancing and wine. But other viewers felt the miniseries humanized him.

Traditional Jesus

• Among the more reverential films is “THE GREATEST STORY EVER TOLD,” a 1965 film starring Max von Sydow as Jesus that’s so loaded with stars that John Wayne’s character doesn’t even merit a name. It clocks in at more than three hours, so get comfortable. Another reverential adaptation is 1961’s “KING OF KINGS,” which hits most of the better-known stories of Jesus’ life and features unmistakable (and uncredited) narration by Orson Welles.

Intermission Jesus

• “BEN-HUR,” the 1959 film that defines “epic,” stars Charlton Heston as a falsely imprisoned Jew named Judah Ben-Hur who seeks revenge on those who destroyed his family. But after encountering Jesus, Ben-Hur learns a thing or two about redemption. Clocking in at more than 31/2 hours, schedule yourself a break to eat, use the restroom, do your taxes ...

Parody Jesus

• “LIFE OF BRIAN” (1979) is the extremely irreverent take on the Jesus story as told by Monty Python’s Flying Circus (seriously, if you’re easily offended, avoid this movie). An everyday guy who was born on Christmas in the stable next door is mistaken for a prophet, and no matter how hard he tries, he can’t convince anyone that he is not the Messiah. Python geeks cry with laughter at “Blessed are the cheesemakers,” the impromptu lesson in Latin as Brian tries his hand at graffiti, and the cheerful closing production number “Always Look on the Bright Side of Life” ... during a mass crucifixion.

Other films with religious themes

• The “Oh, God” movies: George Burns starred as a golf-sweater-wearing, plain-speaking God who asks everyday people to tell his story. The original in 1977 starred John Denver as an assistant grocery store manager who gives up pretty much everything to follow through on God’s request. The 1980 sequel made God’s messenger a young girl. And the 1984 feature that completed the trilogy had God battling the devil over the soul of a musician (Ted Wass, later the dad on “Blossom”) who really, really, really, really wants to be a rock star.

• “Dear God,” starring Greg Kinnear and Tim Conway, is about postal employees who answer letters to God languishing in the dead letter office.

• The “Left Behind” movies: Based on the “Left Behind” novels, the overtly Christian stories are about the beginning of the end of time. Kirk Cameron stars.

• “The Ten Commandments,” the 1956 film about Moses that turned Charlton Heston into the Voice of God.

• “Raiders of the Lost Ark” (1981) introduced us to Indiana Jones as the archeologist/adventurer retrieving the lost Ark of the Covenant from the Nazis.
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The Tomb of Lazarus


[Between 1948 and 1953 excavations lead to the uncovering of ancient Bethany and with it the various sites of Christian devotion from Roman times. The website here details this history together with pictures. - J.S.]

Like most Jewish tombs of old, that of Lazarus was composed of a vestibule and a burial chamber. Quarried out of the soft rock, the tomb was most likely faced during the Byzantine period with stone or marble-work. In its present state, however, with the exception of the entrance, the tomb shows traces of changes and additions made during the Middle Ages. Since the sixteenth century, the entry to the tomb has been made not from the east but from the north, outside the mosque. A flight of 24 steps leads down to the vestibule, 3,35 m. long, 2,20 wide. The east wall was once pierced by the original entrance to the tomb but this is now walled up. Three steps connect the vestibule with the inner chamber which is a little more than two metres in size. It contains three funerary niches (arcosolia), now mostly hidden by a facing of stonework. One tradition places the tomb of Lazarus to the right of the entrance which was formerly closed by a horizontal stone. According to pilgrims of old, it was in this vestibule that Jesus was standing when he called Lazarus from the grave.





See a video here.
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The Lazarus of the Parable and Lazarus who was Four Days in the Tomb


By Metropolitan Anthony Khrapovitsky

Have you ever noticed, dear reader, that in all of Christ’s Parables there occurs but one proper name? If you have noticed, have you ever tried to ascertain why our Lord calls only this Lazarus by name, while even his rival during his earthly sojourn remains under the title of the Rich Man?... Perhaps we would sooner find what we seek, were we to attempt to make a little clearer the individual ideas expressed in the Lord’s parable. Is everything in it clear?

Is our heart reconciled to Abraham’s hope-shattering reply to the Rich Man who was bemoaning his brethren: "If they hear not Moses and the Prophets, neither will they be persuaded, though one rose from the dead?” (Luke 16:31). These stern words, by the very force of their implications, probably troubled many of the Lord’s followers, and to this day continue to trouble many who read the Gospel, for they might seem to be an exaggeration until they are confirmed by actual events. And in fact, they were confirmed.

Not Lazarus the pauper of the parable, but another Lazarus, the friend of Christ, known to all the Jews, plainly rose from the dead, before the eyes of a large crowd of people, having spent four days as an unbreathing, malodorous corpse. “Then many of the Jews which came to Mary, and had seen the things which Jesus did, believed on Him.”

Many, but not all. “But some of them went their ways to the Pharisees, and told them what things Jesus had done” (John 11:45, 46). They assembled, and not only were not mollified in their stubborn unbelief, or more accurately, their disobedience to the truth, but also, in accordance with the voiced intent of Caiaphas, determined to kill the Slayer of Death; yet even this did not seem enough for them. “But the chief priests consulted that they might put Lazarus also to death; because that by reason of him many of the Jews went away, and believed on Jesus” (John 12: 10-11). Note that in their decision there is neither a denial of the miracle, nor an indication of any guilt on the part of those they had condemned: an unjust execution, decided beforehand, was their sole means of keeping the people in unbelief, and they determined to employ such means.

The words which the Lord put on the lips of Abraham concerning the extent of man’s hard-heartedness were thus proved true in all their terrible accuracy: whoever does not want to listen to Moses and the Prophets will not believe one who has risen from the dead. The Apostle John does not cite the parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus, but somewhat earlier recalls Christ’s words which link the Jews’ unbelief in His miracles to disobedience to Moses and secret unbelief in his law, which proceed from their moral callousness and the seeking of their own, not God’s, glory. “There is one that accuseth you, even Moses, in whom ye trust. For had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed Me: for he wrote of Me. But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye believe My words?” (John 5:45-47).

Orthodox Life, 1980, no.2, pp.18-19
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Friday, March 26, 2010

Fasting Rules For Annunciation and Palm Sunday


I received the following question which I thought needed to be clarified in a more public forum, due to certain canonical confusions.

Question:

John, I wanted to ask you about Palm Sunday and the Annunciation. In particular the rule for fasting regarding fish during Great Lent. A few years back there was a debate between my father and our parish priest because the Pedalion states that fish can only be eaten on the Annunciation [during Great Lent]. When the Annunciation fell during Holy Week, fish could be eaten on Palm Sunday. Together, we ended up looking at three different Pedalion [editions]: my dads is an edition from the mid-1930's in Greek, Fathers is from around 1990 in English, and another priests from the mid-1800's in Greek.

Each was the same in the rule for fish during Great Lent. Fish is only allowed on the Annunciation. Interestingly enough, in a footnote in the bottom, each edition said that any deviation from that made one a servant of the stomach, "δουλοσ τησ κοιλιασ". After all of the referencing and cross referencing, they said that over the generations they determined that people must have become accustomed to fish on Palm Sunday because on the occasion that the Annunciation fell during Holy Week, fish was eaten on Palm Sunday. The following year, having remembered they ate fish on Palm Sunday the previous year, they did so again then and also on the Annunciation which came earlier that next year, prior to Holy Week. This lead to the "new" practice of fish on both days. Are you able to tell me if you can confirm any of the this?

They did tell me that the Pedalion was compromised at one point by an individual who was trusted to take it to be published some generations ago. The one Father thought this could explain the discrepancy, perhaps the rule was fish on both days prior to this compromise. Coincidentally, the Father with the older Pedalion said that Bishops have been known to give a dispensation, so long as it is not done publicly to not scandalize others who may know differently.

Answer:

I assume the information you noted which is contained in the footnotes of the Pedalion are the ones by St Nikodemos the Hagiorite. Whatever the case is, it is interesting and worth considering the "evolution" hypothesis which you explained as to how Palm Sunday became a day on which fish is eaten, but even St. Nikodemos would have to admit it is speculation. This hypothesis assumes that the practice of the entire Church and the educated clergy were compromised just by a few who confused, what seems to be clear from the canons, an important tradition. However, I'm not even sure if it was an ancient tradition that if the Annunciation fell during Holy Week that fish was eaten on Palm Sunday instead, though in other years they had abstained on Palm Sunday. There is no evidence for this, as far as I know. Ultimately we do not know the origins of eating fish on Palm Sunday, and personally I do not think it has anything to do with the Annunciation.

By custom and tradition fish as well as oil and wine are permitted on the Saturday of Lazarus along with Palm Sunday, though some also abstain on Saturday of Lazarus from fish. For example, in Russia it is customary to eat caviar on the Saturday of Lazarus, though Greeks tend to abstain from fish (they eat Lazarakia instead). St. Theodore the Studite allowed his monks to eat fish on both Saturday of Lazarus and Palm Sunday in the 9th century.

The Saturday of Lazarus and Palm Sunday are counted among the major feasts of the Church, with the latter among the Twelve Great Feasts. The interlude which separates the Great Fast from Holy Week is Paschal in character. The Saturday of Lazarus and Palm Sunday are both joyous festivals. Therefore, the priest wears festive vestments (white, gold, or green), and the Holy Table is also adorned with a bright cover. The Saturday of Lazarus is a prelude to the Resurrection while Palm Sunday is a prelude to the coming Kingdom.

According to Holy Tradition, there are seven Great Feasts of the Lord:

Elevation of the Holy Cross, September 14
Nativity of Christ (Christmas), December 25
Theophany, January 6
Palm Sunday, the Sunday before Pascha
Ascension, forty days after Pascha
Pentecost fifty days after Pascha
Transfiguration, August 6

If any of these days fall on a fast day, then fish is permitted (or the fast could be eliminated altogether), except for the Elevation of the Holy Cross which is a strict fast day. The same is true with the five Great Feasts of the Theotokos, among which is the Annunciation. When a Great Feast of the Theotokos falls on a fasting day, the fast is relaxed to permit fish, wine, and oil (Exception: when Annunciation falls during Holy Week, wine and oil (but not fish) are permitted; when Annunciation falls on Holy Friday or Holy Saturday, wine [but not oil or fish] are permitted).

The Feasts of the Lord are considered "first class" feasts and the Feasts of the Theotokos are considered "second class". This would mean that Palm Sunday is considered a greater feast than the Annunciation, as far as rank is concerned. This being the case, one can see why fish is permitted on Palm Sunday and why an elaborate "evolutionary" explanation is unnecessary.

As for the fact that the canons only allow fish on one day during Great Lent, the Annunciation, this in no way contradicts the practice of allowing fish on Palm Sunday, or even the Saturday of Lazarus for that matter. Palm Sunday is not during Great Lent, but is part of the interlude between Great Lent and Holy Week. Great Lent ends on the Friday before Palm Sunday. Therefore the canon which says that the Annunciation is the only day during Great Lent fish is allowed is not compromised. This confusion, it seems, is also one reason why the "evolutionary" hypothesis came about as well. Let alone the fact that various Orthodox sources confuse this. For example, on the OCA website for March 25 where the Feast of the Annunciation is explained, it says the following misleading information: "It is one of the two days of Great Lent on which the fast is relaxed and fish is permitted (Palm Sunday is the other)." But as we just said, Palm Sunday is not during Great Lent.

Lastly, it is hard to say what, if any, compromises there are in the Pedalion, and a study on this should be made. Some say it was done by the Venetian publishers, while English speakers may accuse the followers of Apostolos Makrakis, who translated The Rudder, of compromising the texts. I doubt this is the case on this issue however.
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The Roman Revolt of 1821

Fr. Pavlos interviews Athanasios Sakarellos on the so-called "Greek" Revolt of 1821. This program is in Romaic (Greek).

Essentially the so-called "Greek" War of Independence was a Roman revolt which had as its aim the restoration of the Roman Empire, especially of its capital in Constantinople. In this sense, it did not fulfill ts mission. On the other hand, it did fulfill the mission of being freed of the Ottoman occupation. With the governing of Greece by foreign powers began the "barbarization" of Modern Greece and its loss of its historic Roman identity. Patriarch Gregory V foresaw this danger and warned the revolutionaries against the revolt.


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Kings College To Relaunch Its Center for Hellenic Studies


Boost For Greek Unit at King’s

March 26, 2010
Kathimerini

London’s prestigious King’s College yesterday announced plans to boost its Center for Hellenic Studies by broadening the scope of its activities to include teaching as well as research, revoking an initial decision to “downsize” Greek studies after thousands signed a protest petition.

The original plan, made public last month, was to radically scale down the college’s Department of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies due to cuts in state funding for education. The plans prompted thousands of students and professors from the field to sign a petition in protest and the issue was raised in the British and European parliaments.

According to the new, revised plan, the college’s Center for Hellenic Studies will incorporate the threatened Department of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies by the launch of the new academic year.

In a press release issued yesterday, college principal Rick Trainor noted, “The study of the Greek world from prehistory to the present day is a distinctive feature of what we do at King’s and the relaunch of the Center for Hellenic Studies demonstrates our continuing commitment to the subject.”

“I am particularly pleased to be able to make this announcement on Greek Independence Day,” he added.

Professor Emeritus Dame Averil Cameron, the center’s founding director and president of the International Federation of Associations of Classical Studies (FIEC), described the development as “deeply encouraging.” “I know that the news will be warmly received all over the world where Hellenic studies is studied and valued,” she said.

Professor Roderick Beaton, Koraes professor of modern Greek and Byzantine history, language and literature, hailed King’s for devising “a bold and principled way of reaffirming its historic responsibility for a specialist subject-area in which the college has long excelled, now that the UK government, sadly, no longer provides central support for ‘minority’ subjects.”

Read more here.
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Passover Proof Lies In Egyptian Hieroglyphs


March 24, 2010
By Danielle Berrin
Jewish Journal

Pharoah’s papyrus scrolls may not seem the most reliable sources for investigating the story of the Israelite’s Exodus, but Egyptologist Galit Dayan has found in them much compelling evidence to support the historicity of the biblical tale.

Two weeks before Passover, on March 17, Dayan presented her research to an audience of more than 200 at Sinai Temple. Dayan, who earned her Ph.D. in Egyptology from Hebrew University in Jerusalem and is the wife of Jacob Dayan, Consul General of Israel in Los Angeles, told the group that linguistic evidence reveals an ancient and deeply involved Jewish presence in Egypt that eventually disappears. To illustrate, she drew remarkable parallels between the language of Egyptian papyrus (hieroglyphs), the haggadah and the Bible, all of which contain references to the Exodus story. In piecing together these manuscripts, Dayan framed an Exodus narrative based on facts of Egyptian history and language to prove her theory that a mass Exodus did occur and that it happened during the reign of Ramses II.

In each of the Egyptian manuscripts Dayan discussed, the same familiar characters are mentioned: Moses (“an Egyptian name”), Pharoah, the Red Sea/Sea of Reeds (“Yam Suf” in Hebrew), Hebrews, Israelites and the presence of slaves in Egypt.

In one manuscript, known as the Ipuwer papyrus, there is an eerie description of chaos in Egypt: “Plague is throughout the land,” Dayan’s translation reads, “blood is everywhere — the river is blood ... and the hail smote every herd of the field ... the land is without light and there is a thick darkness throughout the land ... the Lord smote all the firstborn in the land of Egypt — from the firstborn of Pharoah that sat on his throne to the firstborn of the captive who was in the prison. ...”

“Ladies and gentlemen,” Dayan said with dramatic effect, “this is an Egyptian papyrus that is describing the same plagues that we have in our haggadah.” She explained her view that the 10 plagues were not random punishments inflicted by the Jewish God upon Egypt, but a “declaration of war” on the entire Egyptian system. Each plague, she said, corresponds to a different Egyptian god and the element of creation over which they held dominion. This means the plagues were not merely grave misfortunes but the most humiliating insults to the Egyptian people.

Dayan, who is a fan of atlases, made use of several maps to support her case. The “Map of the Lakes” depicts the location of several bodies of water in ancient Egypt — including the Yam Suf, or Red Sea — which the Israelites are said to have crossed on their way to Canaan. Although the Egyptians refer to the Yam Suf in a different location from where the Red Sea is located, Dayan said there is a manuscript that depicts “a lake full of suf, or reeds” as having dried out. This was a time, Dayan said excitedly, when “you could cross Yam Suf.”

Academics have narrowed the time period during which the Exodus might have occurred to the reign of three kings, or pharoahs, who are first called such in Egyptian texts. First was King Akhenaten, who reportedly brought monotheism to Egypt (as Dayan believes that groups of Hebrews resided in Egypt since the beginning of Jewish history, it is plausible either that the king passed monotheism onto the Jews or that they could have influenced his theology); next was Ramses II, who moved the Egyptian capital to the delta where many “Habirus” — or Hebrews — resided and also near to where the haggadah says that Israelites “built treasure cities Pitom and Ramses” for Pharoah; and then there is Merneptah Stele, the son of Ramses II who, among his many conquests, conquered “Israel” in the land of Canaan — an indication that the Israelites had already left Egypt and were living in the land.

So far, evidence of the Exodus exists only as pieces of a puzzle. These fragments of history, Dayan admits, appear within different manuscripts written at different times. “People today are still looking for the one piece, the one story — the Egyptian haggadah — that will include all the elements of the story together,” she said.

There are Jews who accept the historicity of the Israelite Exodus from Egypt as an indisputable fact of the Jewish story and for whom its legitimacy cannot be questioned. But within scholarly and scientific circles, whether the Exodus actually occurred is still an issue of serious inquiry and debate. Dayan represents a voice in the middle, sensitive to the Jewish story and also aware of the facts.

“I believe that we helped Egypt succeed and be a great empire,” Dayan said. “When you read the Bible, you can find the footprints of Egyptian culture all over the place. There are so many expressions in the haggadah, in the Bible, that are actually Egyptian expressions. How could we know Egyptian so well? Because we lived there.”

Of course, there are those who disagree. Among them is Sinai’s Rabbi David Wolpe, who led a Q-and-A discussion following Dayan’s lecture. Wolpe famously disputed the historicity of the Exodus in a 2001 sermon.

Did Dayan’s presentation change Wolpe’s mind — even a little?

“Not at all,” Wolpe said during the discussion. “But not because it doesn’t convince me that there’s evidence that makes the story plausible, because I think there is. ... The reason that modern scholars dispute the historicity of the Exodus doesn’t have anything to do with the first two parts of the story [slavery in Egypt, the journey through the desert]; it has to do with the third part [when they arrive in the land].

“If, in fact, hundreds of thousands of Jews left Egypt, then you should be able to see new settlement patterns in Israel — and archaeologists have excavated Israel, and they don’t see a change in the building structure, in the pottery, all the things you think would change if there was a huge immigrant influx,” Wolpe said.

Though the evening ran late and Dayan did not have the opportunity to formally rebut Wolpe’s contentions, Dayan said after the lecture that the reason settlement patterns aren’t visible is because Israelites had not yet conquered their new homeland in Israel — they were nomads, and later papyrus scrolls depicted them as a people without a territory, which would have precluded them from building when they arrived.

To fill in the gaps, Dayan explained, Jews and Israelis would need access to archeological sites in Egypt, which she believes German archeologists are currently excavating. Because the political relationship between Egypt and Israel remains fraught, even archeological endeavors are challenging.

“As an Israeli and a Jew, I can tell you they will do everything they can not to let you dig in Egypt,” Dayan said. “I tried to do it with a French passport, but I didn’t succeed because I was born in Jerusalem. I think the Egyptians today are very afraid that we will find more to support the theory that we lived in the delta.”

“One [archaeologist] even said to me, ‘You know, we don’t want you to one day claim the delta,’ ” she joked.

At the end of the presentation, Wolpe asked Dayan whether any of the other ancient tribes of Egypt still exist, besides the Israelites.

“No,” she answered.

“Whereas, if you have a seder this year,” the rabbi said, turning to the audience, “you will be reenacting something thousands of years old that none of those other cultures who passed through that ancient world can do.”
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Archbishop Hieronymos: "I Get Payed 2300 Euros Per Month"


"I get paid by the state with the amount of 2,300 euros per month. It is not enough for me, but I try to do what my grandmother told me, that in life I should stretch my legs to where I am able", says Archbishop Hieronymos in an interview with the program 'Πρωταγωνιστές'.

Stavros Theodorakis met His Beatitude Hieronymos II and discussed with him everything that has evolved over the past two years in which he is the head of the Greek Church.

Especially on the issue of taxation of the church and church property Hieronymos gives all the answers for the first time.

The cameras of the program followed the Archbishop of Athens for two 24-hour periods, at home, at church, on the streets of Athens and of course in his office.

Among the topics of discussion are: The separation of Church and State, his relations with the Ecumenical Patriarch and the Prime Minister, religious symbols in public places, the citizenship of immigrants, the name of FYROM, the European course of Turkey, the scandal surrounding Vatopaidi Monastery, the mosque in Athens, and his childhood.

This is extremely interesting interview and will be screened on the evening of Palm Sunday March 28, 2010 at 22.50 on MEGA.

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Churches Desecrated In Cyprus, Turned Into Pubs


Kykkos Claims Desecrations Ongoing in the North

March 24, 2010
Cyprus Mail

ONE DAY after the unexpected visit by Archbishop Chrysostomos II to Apostolos Andreas, Kykkos Monastery Museum said it had new evidence of the desecration of churches in the north.

During a news conference yesterday Open University of Greece professor Charalambos C. Chotzakoglou presented several examples as part of the Museum’s effort to publicise the issue.

He highlighted the case of the Virgin of Trachoni church in occupied Nicosia, which was looted during the occupation and turned into a dance school.

According to Chotzakoglou, construction crews are currently building a road next to the church and have severely damaged the western entrance and destroyed the courtyard and surrounding areas in the process.

“Today, the whole surrounding area has become a roundabout, the whole area around the church is being used as a road, and all this has been done with funds from the EU, of which we are a member state, and we have not objected,” he said.

Andrew Rasbash, Head of Unit of the European Commission’s Task Force for the Turkish Cypriot Community, said the EC, through the €259 million EU aid programme for the Turkish Cypriot community finances projects in the northern part of Cyprus.

“However we are not financing road construction through this programme in Nicosia,” he said. But Rasbash added that his colleagues were “checking to see if any projects we are financing in other sectors involve work that could possibly have damaged the Virgin of Trachoni church.”


Chotzakoglou said at the Kyrenia cemetery years-old graves of native Kyrenians had been exhumed – smashing tombstones and crucifixes in the process – to bury Britons “who no longer fit in the nearby British cemetery”

“This is an unacceptable insult to the memory of the dead and an intolerable act of the Anglican Church in Cyprus, which in the free areas enjoys the full freedom and benefit of the Church of Cyprus and the Cyprus Republic.”

In another example he said the Roman Catholic Church of San Francesco in Famagusta was now a pub while the the twin churches of the Knights Hospitallers, are nightclubs.

The church of Panagia in Acheritou had its floors illicitly excavated and fragments of medieval pottery destroyed, and the church of Saint Effimianou, whose north wall was partially demolished by illicit antiquities dealer Aydin Dikman was in the process of having its remaining frescoes destroyed, he said.

Archbishop Chrysostomos visited Apostolos Andreas on Monday after Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayip Erdogan gave the go-ahead to conserve and restore the monastery following nearly four decades of neglect. The structure threatens to collapse in on itself if the restoration plans fail to come to fruition.
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The Taxation of Church Property In Greece


The Church Is A Natural Barrier

by Spyros Bazina
Romfea.gr
March 18, 2010

Like most publicly debated issues in our country, so the issue of taxation of church property is at best a superficial subject of debate and at worst a misleading subject of debate. In each case the result is confusion in the State which made terrible mistakes. The result of this confusion is the support of many poor and honest people (but obviously not close to the Church) of the taxation of church property.

A similar result of confusion is the resignation of some Metropolitans of their salary to the State. The salary of the clergy is not a gift of the State nor the private property of the clergy to have every clergyman give at will. The State gives salary to the clergy of the vast property that the Church gave the State and compared to the revenue of the churches that the Church attaches to the State.

If a Metropolitan or any other cleric wants to waive his salary, he has the obligation to repay the salary to the Church, not the State. Of course, it also creates the impression that they have another method by which to make a living and that any surplus from this salary was not spent on the tasks for the Church, which is not good for either the same or the Church.

If a Metropolitan or any other cleric wants to help the State with gifts or to accept unconstitutional, illegal and unfair taxation, let him do it from any private property he has, and not from the property of the Church. The hierarchy and clergy are of course entitled to manage the assets of the Church, but only for the benefit of the Church. And the Church is not entitled to assign assets to anyone. Otherwise it is committing dereliction of duty under the laws of the State relating to the NPDD and the canons of the Church. If those who made donations to the Church wanted to give it to the State, they could have given it to them on their own and do not need the Church for this purpose.

We have to say it simply and clearly. The taxation of church property will affect those who benefit from the enormous works of charity: the orphans, the widows, the elderly, the sick, the homeless, the starving prisoners, and ordinary people who have little under the sun. Thus, the taxation of church property is not a measure of social justice. This is abuse of church property by members of the Church, the clergy, lay people, and an act which certainly falls within the limits of criminal law and certainly not tax law.

Quite to the contrary, the taxation of church property is an unpopular measure of social injustice. It more or less manages away social resources from the poor and landless to pay them less. The taxation of church property is another taxing of the poor, the wage-earner of low-income and large families. At first glance, it appears to be correct to say that any tax should be levied on the surplus, not the current deficit of the Church.

In an era of such need of the people, the Church has no means to have excess. All means must be spent in the ministry of the people. And furthermore, there is no surplus to give to enable the State to pay less, who themselves have more than those who depend on the charity of the Church.

The taxation of gifts to the Church is the apotheosis of the absurd. Those that help, either from their surplus or from what little they have, the Church in its work, is because they see it as valuable, and are required to enhance a wasteful, corrupt and inefficient State, which now says it came to its senses.

Whatever money spent by the State for schools, camps, hospitals, nursing homes, and orphanages can not reach the quality offered by the faithful volunteers of the Church. But it is highly doubtful that such a State will be interested to pursue such a social project with the resources being taken away from the Church.

However, the taxation of church property represents something else. Philanthropy originated with the birth of the Church. It didn't exist in the ancient world. It is another thing to say that all the ancient beliefs are present today as a reheated soup of last year, with some spices of philanthropy solely intended to lure naive, tired or wicked lads to draw them away from the Church (which has profited us with the freedom and dignity of the human person, which the Church preserves as the pupil of one's eye). And the Church has grown with persecutions, but has stabilized by the tax exemptions the Roman emperors gave the Church.

The taxation of the Church is a reversal of the policy of the last two millennia, and the beginning of a persecution for the Church. This a result of globalization leading to a concentration of wealth in a few hands so that few people can buy the freedom of many.

The Church is a natural barrier to this development and it should put aside the mischief and denigration of the rulers with the removal of its property and many other things we live through these days, not by random chance.

The Church, that is, the hierarchy, the clergy, monks and the faithful people, acknowledges this and are not afraid. If the Hierarchy bends, God forbid, the Church will show forth leaders from the ranks of the clergy, the monks and the laity.

Translated by John Sanidopoulos
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The Philanthropy of the Church of Greece


The Presence of So Many Peoples Sacrifice Is a Ray of Hope, and a Source of Joy

by Monk Moses the Athonite
March 2010

There are still noble benefactors, philanthropic sponsors, modest givers of charity, and eager volunteers. Individualism, enrichment and fun times have not ruled everyone. We must refer to the positive in our society, so as to not be disappointed. Let us be optimistic and still have hope.

The Church of Greece, despite the criticism which it endures from various people, maintains numerous charities and is well organized for charitable services in parishes and cities. Daily it provides the needy throughout Greece with over 35,000 food dishes, among whom are the immigrants who have not received the necessary state care. The current property ownership of the church is to provide for its rich charity work.

The church now operates and maintains:

- 20 nurseries and kindergartens
- 84 homes for the elderly
- 13 hospitals for the chronically ill
- 30 different institutions
- 8 institutions for people with disabilities
- 54 camping areas
- 33 youth institutions
- 10 hospital clinics
- 6 hostels
- 36 orphanages/boarding schools
- 195 soup kitchens
- 44 schools of iconography
- 136 schools teaching Byzantine and European music
- 47 different schools
- 35 blood banks
- 1 home for the blind
- 13 school dormitories
- 7 mental health institutions

In 2009 the church gave an allowance for every third child in Thrace of 120,000 euros. Overall, the Church of Greece last year made sales for various charities the significant amount of 100,000,000 euros.

All this money was given by the faithful, the church-goers, philanthropists, famous and anonymous, rich and poor. Some from their surplus and some from the little they have. Everyone should be commended, especially the latter.

Christ blesses the widow in the Gospel for giving two worthless mites, because she gave it from her heart and from the little that she had. Christ loves the secret giver, as He makes clear in the Holy Gospel. Secrecy is essential to charity. Also, in no way should one offend, expose or shame in a superior manner the kindness of less fortunate givers.

In the scarcity of sincere love in our times, fortunately there are preserved people who spoil their leisure, their laziness, their carelessness, to offer a sweet smile to children and the elderly in several difficult positions.

The presence of so many peoples sacrifice is a ray of hope, and a source of joy and optimism.

Translated by John Sanidopoulos
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See also the Encyclical of the Church of Greece Regarding the World Economic Crisis
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Church of Greece To Challenge the New Tax


Greek Churches to be Taxed in Govt’s Response to Economic Crisis

March 24, 2010
By Hilary White
LifeSiteNews

The Greek government has announced it will start taxing churches as part of its efforts to get out of its financial crisis. A new draft bill to be tabled in parliament next week imposes a 20 per cent tax on the Orthodox church's real estate income, reportedly worth over 10 million Euros (US $14.8 million) a year, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The Orthodox Archbishop of Athens Ieronymos said on Sunday that taxing the churches is unconstitutional and “unprincipled.” He told the Athens weekly, Real News, that the Church of Greece would challenge the tax in the Greek and European courts.

He proposed instead a calculation based on revenues and expenditures, rather than real estate income, with the Church paying 20 percent tax on the remainder of their net income.

“The state is telling us that 'we don't know what your (Church) revenues are; yet, I want 20 percent of what you receive'. This is unconstitutional,” he said. The archbishop dismissed media accounts of the Church’s wealth. “Come and show us where this money is,” Ieronymos said.

Greece is in the midst of a massive economic crisis that analysts have warned could have far-reaching effects throughout the Eurozone. EU leaders have accused the country of encouraging a financial culture characterized by insoluble public and private debt, tax-avoidance and systemic corruption. Greek government debt was estimated at €216 billion in January.

The European Union has imposed a set of criteria that must be met by the government, and on March 5 parliament passed the Economy Protection Bill, that imposed strict austerity measures, which is expected to save €4.8 billion.

The German government is under heavy pressure from the EU to open its purse and produce a bail-out for Greece to save the Euro from collapse. Leaders hope that the German government will cave at the EU summit later this week. Germany, which can borrow at the lowest interest rates in the E.U. and has the Union's largest economy, has resisted the pressure, but Chancellor Angela Merkel said on March 5th that Germany would “stand by Greece.” The argument has threatened to weaken the EU’s financial hegemony.

The Greek financial crisis is part of a larger economic melt-down that is being called the European Sovereign Debt Crisis. Other countries caught in the crisis are Spain, Ireland, and Portugal. Fears over the crisis have led to a weakening of the Euro and a widespread global stock selloff in February.

Economists are arguing over whether the Euro can survive the crisis. Desmond Lachman, a senior fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, said at a conference hosted by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Washington that the Greek government should revert to the Drachma. The Euro, he said, is a “disastrous experiment” born of political ideology rather than sound economic theory. Continued membership in the Euro, he said, would result in the Greek government having recourse only to tax increases and cuts to public spending to overcome its massive debt problem.

Meanwhile, unemployment has risen sharply in Greece during the crisis, and nationwide strikes have been launched in opposition to the austerity measures. Prime Minister George Papandreou told a European Parliament Committee earlier this month that the EU’s refusal to provide a cash bailout will force the country into the arms of the International Monetary Fund for a financial rescue.

After a meeting in Brussels last week, Papandreou said, “What Greece is asking for is to be able to borrow on the same conditions as other countries, so that Greek peoples' sacrifices will not be wasted due to high interest rates.”
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Sermon for the Fifth Friday of Great Lent


CATECHESIS 70: That We Should Endure Every Torment In Imitation of Christ and the Saints.

by St. Theodore the Studite

Given on the Friday of the 5th Week of Great Lent.

Brethren and Fathers, the previous instruction[1] no doubt pained you which indicated the trials that are being meditated against us. "But because of what I have said to you," says the Lord, "grief has filled your hearts; but I speak the truth to you" [John 16:6-7]. And again the Apostle: "It is not troublesome for me to speak, while for you it is a safeguard" [Phil. 3:1]. May we be safeguarded, then, with every spiritual safeguard, and if what is being said passes into act, we will meet it, with God's help, nobly; but if not, it will not be without advantage for us as our good God accepts such preparation and without toils and blows crowns those who thus choose.

Already Lent draws to its end and the time introduces the fair crown, that is the remembrance of the life-giving sufferings of the Saviour, in which we find the greatest consolation. For if our Lord and God was arrested for our sins, is it a great matter if we unprofitable servants should also be arrested for his sake? And if he was bound and led away and put in prison, is it so strange should we suffer the same treatment as the Master? Rather it would be exceedingly grievous not to encounter such things. But if we must be scourged, let us bear the scourges; and if we must be beaten, let us bear the beatings; and if we have to be spat on, let us bear the spittings; and finally if we must be put to death, let us bear that revered death. And good it is if anyone were to be found worthy to become a partaker in Christ's sufferings. This is blessedness, this is immortality.

Do we not hear what the Apostle says? "From now on, let no one make trouble for me; for I carry the marks of the Lord Jesus branded on my body" [Gal. 6:17]. As though he were saying: Let no one despise me, for I bear the adornments of Christ the universal King in my flesh. Such also was Saint Ignatios who was called God-bearer by his bearing in himself the Lord's sufferings. Such was St Eustratios who cried out in the midst of torments and said, ‘Now I know that Christ lives in me’. O blessed voices and thrice-blessed souls! Whose memorials then do we celebrate? Whose nativities do we feast? To whom do we erect sacred churches, whose relics do we venerate? Is it not those of the Martyrs? Those of the Confessors? Those of the Ascetics? And if here they have been found worthy of so great glory, how much and how great the splendour they would enjoy in the age to come? Ineffable and unimaginable the reckoning! This is the fair business, this the blessed exchange: by small struggles and toils to purchase goods that are eternal and without end.

Let us too then imitate them, brethren; let us mingle our blood with the holy blood, for this is possible; for its nature is not dissimilar nor has He changed who says: "See, see that I am and I have not changed" [Cf. Dt. 32:39 and Mal. 3:6]. He loves all equally, He died on behalf of all, He sets before all inexhaustible delight, He is passionate for the salvation of all, and this to Him is riches, for He says "He is richly generous to all who call upon Him" [Rom. 10:12]. Therefore let us call upon Him in what befalls us and "He will give power and might" [Ps. 67:36] to our souls. Let us embrace Him and "He will bring our enemies to naught" [Ps. 107:14] both seen and invisible. Let us await Him and He will crown us for the day of resurrection of the dead, for the day of His appearing; for which may we too be found worthy to attain without condemnation and to stand uncondemned at his judgement seat, giving a good defence, in Christ our Lord, to whom be glory and might, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, now and for ever, and to the ages of ages. Amen.

1. Unless the renegade Alexander was more dangerous than St Theodore says, this does not seem to have been Catechesis 69. Moreover according to some MSS there was one for Thursday of this week, number 33 of the Large Catechesis. The latter speaks of no such threats.

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