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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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Monday, June 4, 2012

Meditation On Pentecost (3 of 3)



By St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite

3. Consider, my beloved, the change the Holy Spirit wrought in the tongues of the Apostles. For they who at first spoke about nothing but earthly and base things, about fleeting and vain glories and honors: "Grant unto us that we may sit, one on Thy right hand, and the other on Thy left hand, in Thy glory" (Mk. 10:37); they who spoke lowly and unworthily of Christ: "It is good for us to be here: and let us make three tabernacles; one for Thee, and one for Moses, and one for Elias" (Lk. 9:33); they who formerly even agreed with Judas to castigate that blessed Mary and get angry at her for anointing the feet of Jesus with very costly myrrh, saying with indignation: "Why was this waste of the ointment made? For it might have been sold for more than three hundred pence, and have been given to the poor. And they murmured against her" (Mk. 14:4-5). These very same Apostles, I say, after the coming of the Holy Spirit, did not speak about anything else but the wonderful things of God, about lofty and great things, the kingdom of the heavens, the theology of the Holy Trinity, the incomprehensible mystery of the Incarnate Economy, that Christ is true God. They spoke with sublime rhetoric, surpassing frankness, and in various tongues: "We do hear them speak in our tongues the wonderful works of God" (Acts 2:11).

Now, my beloved, think about the words you spoke prior to reading this exercise and the words which you should now speak in order that you too may receive this change of tongue by the grace of the Holy Spirit. God gave you a tongue, my brother, as an instrument to speak good things, and not evil things. Therefore, you must use it in the way that God intended, that is to say, to always glorify and praise God with your tongue, and to recite His divine words, as it is written: "Every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father" (Phil. 2:11). And again: "My tongue shall speak of Thy righteousness, and of Thy praise all the day long" (Ps. 34:32). You should not use it to speak impious words against God and to call upon His holy Name for vain things: "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain" (Ex. 20:7). You should use it to criticize and reproach yourself, not praise yourself: "Let another man praise thee, and not thine own mouth; a stranger, and not thine own lips" (Pr. 27:2). You should use your tongue to counsel your brother about those things that are unto his salvation and to establish him in good and virtuous things, not sharpen it like a knife against him, mocking him, criticizing him, and scornfully insulting him with anger: "They have sharpened their tongues like a sword" (Ps. 63:3). Neither should you use it to give bad counsel, using smooth and gentle words, sneaky and inimical, in order to do harm to your brother and injure him: "Their words were smoother than oil, and yet they are darts" (Ps. 54:24). In a word, you should have the wondrous things of God on your tongue, the words of the Old and New Testament, things concerning divine Providence and judgment, and the things concerning God’s goodness. All of your conversations should be about spiritual and divine matters and spiritually edifying. If you use your tongue for these things, know that the Lord has spiritually formed your tongue, just as He did for the man who was deaf and mute: "And He spit, and touched his tongue... and the string of his tongue was loosed" (Mk. 7:33-35). And it is a good sign that the Holy Spirit has begun to change your own tongue and speak Himself through it, as He spoke through the Apostles and David: "The Spirit of the Lord spake by me, and His word was in my tongue" (2 Kg. [2 Sam.] 23:2).

Be ashamed, then, my brother, for having until now spoken like a carnal man and as an infant, and not as a spiritual and perfect man: "When I was a child, I spake as a child" (1 Cor. 13:11). And be ashamed that your tongue has spoken injustice, just as Isaiah says: "Your tongue mutters unrighteousness" (Is. 59:3).

Be resolved from now on not to allow any rotten, absurd, and vain words out of your mouth, but only edifying and salvific words unto the building up of your hearers, just as the Apostle orders you: "Let no corrupt communication proceed out of your mouth, but that which is good to the use of edifying, that it may minister grace unto the hearers" (Eph. 4:29). For, "the word is the shadow of the deed,"10 as a wise man has said, and evil words bring about evil deeds, just as, contrarily, good words bring about good deeds. For this reason Solomon said that in the tongue’s control are both life and death: "Death and life are in the power of the tongue" (Pr. 18:21). And just as whoever wears perfumes causes both himself and others to smell like perfume, so also whoever bears a stench causes both himself and others to stink. In the same way, whoever speaks good words profits both himself and his hearers, while whoever speaks evil words injures both himself and his hearers.

Lastly, entreat the Holy Spirit to strengthen that which He has begun to work in you: "Strengthen, O God, this which Thou hast wrought in us" (Ps. 67:29), and demonstrate a complete change in your tongue by His grace so that you never again err with your tongue by any improper word: "If any man offend not in word, the same is a perfect man" (Jam. 3:2). But rather that the Holy Spirit use your tongue like a pen and direct it with His right hand so that you speak only those things He wants. Then you will say: "My tongue is the pen of a swiftly writing Scribe" (Ps. 44:1). And those who see and hear you will say: "This change hath been wrought by the right hand of the Most High" (Ps. 76:10).

Notes:

10 Democritus, Testimonia 1.33.

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Labels: Pascha and the Pentecostarion
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The Day of the Holy Spirit



By Sergei V. Bulgakov

The feast in honor of the Holy Spirit, "one of the Trinity of God, one in honor, one in essence and one in glory with the Father and the Son” is celebrated on the Monday after Pentecost. This feast has been established by the Church "for the majesty of the Most Holy and Life-creating Spirit, for He is one of the Holy and Life-originating Trinity", in reaction to the teaching of the heretics who rejected the divinity of the Holy Spirit and that He is equal-in-honor with God the Father and the God the Son. 

"The Holy Spirit”, as it says in the Synaxarion, “is called the Comforter because He can encourage and calm us; we received Him 'in place of Christ' and through Christ we have Him; He intercedes before God for us with unspeakable sighs as the Lover of mankind, interceding for us in exactly the same way as Christ, for He is the Comforter. Therefore the Holy Spirit is called the other Comforter; wherefore the Apostle says: 'we have the Comforter Jesus before God'. He is called according to the unity in essence; wherefore in one sense 'one and the other' we understand identical and consubstantial, and the words 'one and the other' is about various natures. This Holy Spirit is one with the Father and the Son in everything; He therefore accomplishes everything with Them, even the future resurrection, and everything that He wants, He creates, sanctifies, divides, renews, sends, makes wise, anoints the prophets, and briefly to say: does everything, being all-powerful, omnipotent, good, correct, and reigning. Through him is granted every wisdom, life, activity, as He is the source of sanctification and all life. In general He has everything that Father and the Son has "except for being unbegotten and begotten", proceeding only from the Father.* When the Holy Spirit was poured out on all flesh, then the world was filled with every kind of gift, and through Him all peoples were guided to the knowledge of God, and both any illness and any infirmity are driven out."**

* St. Athanasius says: "The Holy Spirit is from the Father. He is not made, He is not created, and He is not begotten, but proceeds." But what the procession of the Holy Spirit from Father consists in is incomprehensible for us, as the birth of the Son is also incomprehensible. "Though we are taught", says St. John of Damascus, "that there is a distinction between birth and procession, we do not know in what the paradigm of this distinction consists." Therefore the Orthodox Church never dared to subject this mystery of the Divinity to human deliberation, but has always confessed and confesses what agrees with the teaching of our Savior Jesus Christ (Jn. 15:26).

** The Christian being informed in the mysteries of the church, the Holy Spirit enriches him with many various gifts, from which, according to the teaching of the word of God (Is. 11:1-3), the most important of them: "the Spirit of the fear of God, the spirit of knowledge, the spirit of might, the spirit of counsel, the spirit of understanding, the spirit of wisdom, the spirit of the Lord, or the gift of piety" (Orthodox Catechism). The spirit of the fear of God is the gift expressing that attitude of the soul in which the person is frightened by breaking the Law of God and constantly keeps in himself the feeling of awesomeness before God similar to Enoch who "walks before God" (Gen. 5:24). The spirit of knowledge or of leading is the gift to learn the Divine truths necessary for the salvation of the person. The spirit of power or of might is the gift by which the person with spiritual courage eliminates all obstacles and overcomes all difficulties in the ascetic efforts of Christian virtues. The spirit of counsel is the gift of sensible attitude to calling and duty and the ability correctly to reason and resolve the confusion he meets on the way of his own salvation and the salvation of his neighbor. The spirit of understanding is the gift of the deep knowledge of the subjects of faith and Christian life, the gift to deeply understand things and to judge actions not only according to their external attributes, but also intelligently to penetrate the very essence of things and to state a true estimation of all. The spirit of wisdom is the gift of knowledge of the divine truths, to rightly use them for salvation and to go for it in the correct way, not inclining to the erroneous and false road. The spirit of the Lord is the gift of deep piety and beneficial penetration of all the spiritual powers of the person through the inspiring of the Holy Spirit, directing the Christian in the service and ascetical efforts of holy zealousness according to God. "All these are inspired by one and the same Spirit, apportioning to each one as is pleasing to Him" (1 Cor. 12:11). Enriching the person with spiritual gifts and growing spiritual fruits in him, the Holy Spirit adorns the person with many various virtues, and makes him, according to Holy Scripture, like the good tree, bearing good fruit (Mt. 7:16). It is also an essential attribute of penetration of the person by the Holy Spirit, where such a person will both think and feel and wish only that which is suitable to God, aspires to the spiritual blessings; but similarly those not having the Spirit of God live only according to the flesh, think only about the carnal, cares about terrestrial and is satisfied only by the terrestrial. Therefore, the life according to the Spirit is also clearly found in the fruits of Spirit. The Apostle Paul in the Epistle to the Galatians, listing the carnal deeds of an unworthy Christian, opposes to them the deeds of the Spirit: "Love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, mercy, faith, meekness, abstinence" (Gal. 5:22-23).

Any of us can test ourselves according to these fruits: do we live and act according to the Holy Spirit? Whoever feels that his heart is opened for love for the Grantor of all blessings, for God and neighbor, for the love which is the beginning and root of all virtues, "in perfect harmony" (Col. 3:14); by which the soul is filled with joy, nourished with living faith in the Savior and hopefully on the great promises of God; who by faith in Jesus Christ, having reached atonement with God, feels peace with himself, with his own conscience, with his neighbor; who in grief, illness, persecutions and other tests transfers to the account of the Lord without murmur, irritation and complaints; who shows kindness to neighbor, condescending change, brotherly affection with tenderness (Rom. 12:10); who, seeing the needs of the neighbor, sincerely perceives the need to come to him fully ready to aid him according to the measure of his power; who, being himself an open mirror for others in his deeds, speech, thoughts, in all movements of soul, is foreign to suspiciousness for his neighbor and relates to him with childlike trustfulness; whoever covers the infirmity and wrongdoings of his neighbor with condescension, avoids in his relations with them any quarrelsomeness and wrath and whoever, finally, will keep moderation in the satisfaction of carnal needs and using innocent pleasures - in those the Holy Spirit abides through His own grace.

And the Lord does everything that we be spirit-filled: that we rise again in Baptism, that we be signed with Chrism, that we be reconciled from sins in Repentance, and that we seek to unite ourselves with Him in Communion; on a broader scale He abundantly pours out grace on us through water.

We, from our side, should with all possible fervor do everything that is necessary to be filled with the grace of the Holy Spirit, wherefore: "Any one who does not have the Spirit of Christ, does not belong to Him" (Rom. 8:9).

But what must we do? The presence of the Spirit of God and the action of His grace is witnessed in our heart by sincere warmth for God - by temperance, by tenderness, by reverence. So we must to do everything that will raise and support this warmth, and avoid everything that will dissipate and cool our heart to God,obeying the commandment of the Apostle which says: "Do not quench the Spirit" (1 Th. 5:19), "do not offend the Holy Spirit of God" (Eph. 4:30), and in another place rules "rekindle the gift of God" (2 Tim. 1:6). If we rekindle, He will not extinguish, if we do not offend Him, He will remain in us, but with Him is both all the abundance and all the fullness of the spiritual life.

For this purpose, first, one must steadily abide in church order and formation in everything or in the prayerful and ascetic labor according to the order and the Typicon (Ustav) of the Holy Church. Here certainly the observance of fasts, frequent penance and communing the Holy Mysteries, all other prayerful blessings, going to the temples of God for all services, not only on feasts, but also at any season when affairs allow, domestic prayers, hearing and reading the words of God, conversations with devout people, obedience to one's father confessor, and on a broader scale everything, that is confirmed in the Church for instilling in us the spiritual life, or adorning ourselves and everything in our lives with churchliness.

The grace of the Holy Spirit, received by us in the mysteries, is also that spark which has taken root in some kind of material. Here air is necessary for that material to burn from that spark, so that if there is no air the spark dies out; and so for us as the spark of grace falling into our essence through the mystery turns to spiritual flame, each of us must weigh ourselves down with spiritual air (atmosphere); but such air serves all of the church building. As the spark is ignited by the movement of air (wind) in the flame; so churchliness, by this spiritual trend, will stir up in us the power of the grace of the Spirit of God. "Be filled with the Spirit", commands the Apostle, "addressing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs" (Eph. 5:19). The more earnestly and reverent one enters this order, the more his heart is likely warmed and the Spirit of grace is ignited; on the other hand, for the one who leaves the Church that grace of the Spirit soon dies out, is cooled and dies again as fire in a vacuum dies.

To this prayerful labor or pious deeds one must still attach, secondly, the labor of good works: to give alms, to show compassion, to resolve offences, to protect from oppression, to observe the truth, to abstain from anger, envy, condemnation and every lust, and on a broader scale to create any beneficence to what the Lord obligates us in our life and in our circumstances. "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit" (Gal. 5:25). As natural forces weaken and atrophy from lack of exercise, the grace of the Spirit is also diminished and completely departs when we do not practice Her unique deeds, when we do not allow Her the open space to operate in us and penetrate us, and, what is even worse, if the deeds oppose Her, we shall drive Her away from ourselves. Wherefore as bees fly away from smoke so also the grace of the Spirit flies away from the acrid smoke of pernicious deeds and passions. Therefore the Apostle said: "And do not offend the Holy Spirit of God, in whom you were sealed for the day of deliverance", and then he adds: "Let all bitterness, and wrath, and anger, and clamor, and slander be put away from you, with all malice" (Eph. 4:30, 31), specifying what deeds offends the Spirit of God. The grace of the Spirit of God is immaculate. To keep Her before us, one must keep the house of his heart in cleanliness and with decent furniture, and this furniture is composed of the union of various virtues (Col. 6, 12-17). Here the proper furniture in the temple for the dwelling of the Spirit of God is sincerity. If we shall go into these deeds, the grace will always inhere in us, and Her fire will never go out in us. But it is not enough to have deeds; one must while doing deeds have both good thoughts and feelings, to have the art to control the movements of the heart, which the Holy Fathers call attention, temperance, internal action. It concentrates all our forces in oneness and is therefore the strongest means for kindling the grace of the Spirit of God in us. Scattered rays of the sun do not light themselves; but when in the process of burning they fly down and collect in one point, they soon will ignite any combustible substance. Also it is accomplished even in us. When we do not give heed to ourselves, our ideas and feelings are in dispersion; but when we give heed, they gather in oneness, and in our heart warmth will then be kindled from the thought of the omnipresent Lord who fills all things. If, in such a way, we take heed and intelligently standing sincerely before the Lord, we shall walk in the commandments of God and in the full order of the Church; but also the grace of the Holy Spirit will unquenchably burn in us. The fire of the Holy Spirit will then burn up all impurities, and we are created as the dwelling of God in the Holy Spirit. (For details see: Toboljskiia Eparkhialjniia Vedomosti (Tobolsk Diocesan News) 1892, 9-10; Sermons and Speeches of Theophanes, Bishop of Tambov, pp. 188-191).

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Sunday, June 3, 2012

Meditation On Pentecost (2 of 3)


By St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite

2. Consider, my beloved, the change the Holy Spirit wrought in the hearts of the Apostles, who in the beginning were so fond of life, such lovers of the flesh, and such cowards, that in order to protect their lives, one of them deserted his Teacher during His Passion and ran away naked: "And there followed Him a certain young man, having a linen cloth cast about his naked body... And he left the linen cloth, and fled from them naked" (Mk. 14:51-52).5 Another one denied Him, and all the rest departed: "And they all forsook Him, and fled" (Mk. 14:50). And because they were like frightened hares, they remained locked up in the upper room out of fear and didn’t dare go outside for nearly the entire period of the fifty days after the Resurrection. But after the Holy Spirit descended upon them, He changed the weakness of their hearts into courage and bravery. Then they went outside like fearless lions and preached the crucified Jesus before all the multitudes of people with open faces, with brave chests, and with courage and boldness without flinching before either threats, or lashings, or torments and tortures, or death itself. But they longed for these things like delights and revelries and they exceedingly rejoiced upon receiving them: "And they departed from the presence of the council, rejoicing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for His name" (Acts 5:41). Then you would see Peter, who beforehand was cowardly and in love with this life, and who was not even able to listen to a single word of a simple girl without fear, standing fearlessly and boldly speaking with a loud voice before thousands of people without thinking them at all to be people, but as if they were brutes and plants or stones. And by his speaking he drew three thousand people to the faith of Christ: "But Peter, standing up with the eleven, lifted up his voice, and said unto them" (Acts 2:14). Then you would see those unlearned fishermen so full of knowledge and wisdom that the wise and learned would be in awe: "They perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men, and they marveled" (Acts 4:13). And why is this? Because the Holy Spirit put a breadth of knowledge in their hearts, just as it is written about Solomon: "And God gave Solomon wisdom and understanding exceeding much, and largeness of heart" (3 Kg. [1 Kg.] 5:9); and because "the Lord had touched their hearts," as it is written (1 Kg. [1 Sam.] 10:26). What grace! What power! What fire of the Holy Spirit, which, setting the heart aflame but once, makes hares into lions, the weak strong, the unwise wise. It changes that which is earth into fire, and transforms those who were once statues into perfect men. This is what God promised to give through the Prophet Micah, saying: "There shall be none to hearken to them, unless I am filled with strength from the Spirit of the Lord" (Mic. 3:7-8).

Now you also, my brother, who are reading these things, think about this: If you have received this courage and fervor in your heart so that you do not fear flesh, the world, or the ruler of this world, this is a sign that you have been changed by the Spirit of the Lord, just as it is written: "Then shall the Spirit change him and pass through him, and make an atonement; this strength belongs to my God" (Hab. 1:11). And if you used to seek out with all the vehemence of your desires the goods of this world - riches, glory, pleasures - and if you considered the person who had the greater amount of these goods the most blessed, know that until now your heart has been worn down, unfeeling, and hardened like a stone because of the spirit of the world and of the flesh. For this reason lament and repent, because in all the years of your life you have not become worthy to receive through the Holy Spirit a new heart, with feeling and of profit to you, which God promised to give to you: "And a new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you: and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will put My Spirit in you" (Ezek. 36:26-27).

But if you now seek after the completely opposite things – instead of taking pride in wealth you are humbled and rejoice in poverty and long to be dishonored and disgraced; instead of desiring delights and revelries you love frugality and self-control – know that the Holy Spirit has begun to change your heart into another heart, just as it is written concerning Saul: "And it was so, that when Saul had turned his back to go from Samuel, God gave him another heart" (1 Kg. [1 Sam.] 10:9). Therefore be glad and thank the Lord Who through the Holy Spirit has not only purified your mind but has also warmed your heart and wishes to change you from a carnal person into a spiritual person, from a foolish infant into a wise man, and from a worldly gentile into a true Christian. For the Holy Spirit is accustomed to bringing about such God-befitting and strange changes, just as the great theologian Gregory theologizes: "This Spirit, for He is most wise and most loving, if He takes possession of a shepherd makes him a Psalmist, subduing evil spirits by his song, and proclaims him King of Israel; if he possess a goatherd and scraper of sycamore fruit, He makes him a Prophet. Call to mind David and Amos. If He possess a goodly youth, He makes him a Judge of Elders, even beyond his years, as Daniel testifies, who conquered the lions in their den. If He takes possession of Fishermen, He makes them catch the whole world in the nets of Christ, taking them up in the meshes of the Word. Look at Peter and Andrew and the Sons of Thunder, thundering the things of the Spirit. If of Publicans, He makes gain of them for discipleship, and makes them merchants of souls; witness Matthew, yesterday a Publican, today an Evangelist. If of zealous persecutors, He changes the current of their zeal, and makes them Pauls instead of Sauls, and as full of piety as He found them of wickedness."6

Therefore be ashamed, my brother, because until now you were far from such thoughts, going about in the evil desires of your heart, not allowing any place therein for the Holy Spirit to dwell. And to put it briefly, because you have lived only like an unspiritual and worldly person, who is unable to receive the things of the Spirit: "But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned" (1 Cor. 2:14). Make a decision that for the rest of your life you will not grieve the Holy Spirit any longer with any improper and evil appetite of your heart, according to the commandment given you by the Apostle: "And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God" (Eph. 4:30). And that you will not oppose His holy will as one hard of heart, like those hardhearted Jews to whom Stephen said: "Ye stiffnecked and uncircumcised in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Spirit" (Acts 7:51). Rather, you should offer your whole heart to the Holy Spirit, with all of its desires, so that He may dwell in it, just as the Spirit Himself commands you, saying: "My son, give Me thine heart" (Pr. 23:26). You will give your heart to the Holy Spirit if you always meditate on the Name of Jesus Christ the Son of God in your heart through unceasing prayer. For although the Holy Spirit proceeds only from the Father, He also is, and is called, the Spirit of the Son on account of being of the same essence and resting in the Son, on account of which the Spirit rejoices when the Son is named: "God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father" (Gal. 4:6). Through this noetic and spiritual prayer you will contemplate the Son in the Spirit, and the Father in the Son, as Basil the Great says.7 And you will be deemed worthy through this noetic exercise to find and behold noetically the grace of the Holy Spirit which you received in Holy Baptism, but which you have buried like a spark under your passions and sins.

And lastly, since the All-holy Spirit – the other Comforter, the completing Person of the Holy Trinity, the Giver of all spiritual gifts, the Life of the living, the Mover of things moved, and the Perfecter of all beings – simply out of His philanthropy wanted to etch in your heart the first lines and initial from of His grace, entreat Him not to leave you incomplete, but to bring to completion that form and work which He began in you, granting you the charisma of abiding in and enduring perseverance in His grace, which charisma is the greatest of them all.8 And entreat the Holy Spirit through this charisma to deem you worthy, who are presently but earth and dust, to become even here and now completely spiritual, completely angelic, completely holy and a son of God, and god by grace, just as Basil the Great says: "When the Holy Spirit came upon the body of man, He bestowed life, and He bestowed immortality and sanctification. He raised up that which was lying down. That work which was begun by the eternal movement of the Holy Spirit became a holy creature. And man, who once was earth and dust, received the honor to be indwelt by the Holy Spirit, to be a prophet, an apostle, and an angel of God."9

Notes:

5 This was James the Brother of the Lord, who wore only one garment all of his life, as the sacred Theophylact says (Enarratio in Evangelium Marci, PG 123, 657C).

6 St. Gregory the Theologian, Oratio 41.14, PG 36, 448B-448C; NPNF (V2-07), 384.

7 Cf. St. Basil the Great, De Spiritu Sancto 26.64, PG 32, 185A; NPNF (V2-08), 40: "Just as the Father is seen in the Son, so is the Son in the Spirit."

8 According to the theologians, only the charisma of abiding in the grace of the Holy Spirit begins and completes God’s purpose for each person.

9 St. Basil the Great, Adversus Eunomium 5, PG 29, 769B.


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Saturday, June 2, 2012

Meditation On Pentecost (1 of 3)


Meditation on Pentecost
during which the Holy Spirit wrought in the Apostles
1) a change of mind, 2) a change of heart, and 3) a change of tongue.1

By St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite

1. Consider, my beloved, how the All-holy Spirit filled the entire house where the divine Apostles were sitting and praying when the Holy Spirit descended into the upper room in the form of fiery tongues like a violent wind and thunder: "And It filled all the house where they were sitting" (Acts 2:2); and how the Holy Spirit made the house into something like a baptismal font, as Gregory of Thessaloniki says, in order to baptize the Apostles with His divine grace, concerning which baptism the Lord foretold them: "Ye shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days hence" (Acts 1:5). "It filled the house where they were sitting, making it a spiritual font, and accomplishing the promise which the Saviour made them when He ascended, saying, ‘For John truly baptized with water, but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit.’ Even the name which He gave them proved to be true, for through this noise from heaven the Apostles actually became sons of Thunder."2 At that very time the All-holy Spirit Himself wrought three changes in the Apostles. The first was a change in the mind of the Apostles, such that their previous ideas concerning the things of this world were altered so that they began to understand clearly the lowliness and vanity of present good things, and on the other hand to understand the greatness and eternalness of the future good things. Therefore, those same Apostles who just a short while ago disputed among themselves who among them would be the first and greatest: "And there was also a strife among them, which of them should be accounted the greatest" (Lk. 22:24), after receiving the Holy Spirit considered it a great blessing to be lesser than everyone, to be despised by everyone on account of Christ, and to be looked upon as weaklings, fools, disgraces, with contempt, and as the trash and refuse of the world and men: "We are fools for Christ's sake, we are weak, we are despised... we are made as the filth of the world, and are the offscouring of all things unto this day‛ (1 Cor. 4:10-13).

Now, my brother, think about whether this change of mind has also occurred in you through reading this spiritual exercise and what spiritual degree you have reached. For if up to now you have thought it a great thing to be honored and esteemed by men, to be in the heart of everyone and loved by all, to always be seeking out new pleasures (wasting the time on these things that was given to you in order that you might gain the eternal good things), and to live with taxes and among worldly controversies, it is apparent that up until now your mind has been directed by the spirit of the world and not by the Spirit of God. For this you should lament and repent, because Christ died, resurrected, and ascended into the heavens, not to give you the spirit of the world, but to give you His own Spirit, and you, by the evil life you have been living, have not become a recipient of His Divine Spirit: "Now we have received, not the spirit of the world, but the Spirit which is from God" (1 Cor. 2:12). However, from now on you must be resolved to change your ways completely, namely, to be guided by the teachings of the Gospel and the Holy Spirit, not to reckon any other honor but that which magnifies you before God, and not to choose any other good except that which will bring you Paradise. If you do these things it is a good sign that the grace of the Holy Spirit has begun to illumine your mind and to change you from the person you were into another person, just as it is written about Saul: "The Spirit of the Lord will come upon thee, and thou shalt be turned into another man" (1 Kg. [1 Sam.] 10:6). On account of this you should rejoice and thank the Lord Who illumined you with His Holy Spirit so that you might not walk any longer as an infant, but as a perfect man: "When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things" (1 Cor. 13:11), and so that you might not follow any longer the mindset of the flesh, which is death, but the mindset of the Spirit, which is life: "To be carnally minded is death; but to have the mind of the Spirit is life and peace‛ (Rom. 8:6).

Be ashamed, then, of your past life, when you lived, not as a family member of Christ, but as an alien and foreigner, because you did not possess the Spirit of Christ, for according to the Apostle: "Now if any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of His" (Rom. 8:9). Humbly ask the Holy Spirit to completely reorient your mind toward His divine will, enlightening it with His grace, and not superficially, but penetratingly to the depths, so that you might not be deprived of His enlightenment and grace like David, and say with him: "The light of mine eyes, even this is not with me" (Ps. 37:10). And to a dim enlightenment you should add a purer and brighter enlightenment, saying: "In Thy light shall we see light" (Ps. 35:10). But how can you retain this enlightenment of the Holy Spirit in your mind and not let it be extinguished? Listen to what the divine Chrysostom has to say to you: Just as the light of a lamp is ignited and continues to shine because of the oil in it, but when the oil is consumed the light too is extinguished, so the grace of the Holy Spirit is ignited and illumines us when we have good works and almsgiving in our souls. But when we lack good works and almsgiving the light of the Holy Spirit departs from us. "For just as the light of a lantern is fueled by oil, and when the oil burns off the light is extinguished as well; in like manner, the grace of the Spirit ignites and illumines us when we have good works and have much almsgiving and compassion for the poor in our soul. When these are absent, however, then does grace also disappear and depart."3 Accordingly the Spirit of the Lord which was given to Saul departed from him because he did not have a good will and virtuous deeds: "The Spirit of the Lord departed from Saul" (1 Kg. [1 Sam.] 16:14). For this reason Paul commands us by writing: "Quench not the Spirit" (1 Th. 5:19).

Basil the Great says that just as a fever permanently remains in some bodies for a long time, but in others temporarily and only for a short while, so it is with the Holy Spirit, for He remains in some people permanently on account of the firmness of their good will, as it was for Eldad and Medad (concerning whom it is written in Numbers 11:26 that they always prophesied); while in others the Holy Spirit is found only temporarily and quickly departs on account of the instability of their will, as was the case for Saul and the seventy elders who only once prophesied and then lost the charisma of prophecy: "As in our bodies is health, or heat, or, generally, their variable conditions, so, very frequently is the Spirit in the soul; since He does not abide with those who, on account of the instability of their will, easily reject the grace which they have received. An instance of this is seen in Saul and the seventy elders of the children of Israel, except Eldad and Medad, with whom alone the Spirit appears to have remained, and, generally, any one similar to these in character."4

Notes:

1 Translated by Fr. George Dokos, ThD. This is the Thirty-Third Meditation from St. Nikodemos’ book Pneumatika Gymnasmata [Spiritual Exercises] ([Thessaloniki: Regopoulos, 1999], 286-293).

2 St. Gregory Palamas, Homily Twenty-Four: On how the Holy Spirit was manifested and shared out at Pentecost, PG 151, 312B; The Homilies of Saint Gregory Palamas, Volume Two ([South Canaan: St. Tikhon’s Seminary Press, 2004], 25-26).

3 St. John Chrysostom, De Verbis Apostoli, Habentes Eumdem Spiritum 6, PG 51, 277.

4 St. Basil the Great, De Spiritu Sancto 26.61, PG 32, 180D-181A; NPNF (V2-08), 38.
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Saturday of Souls Before Pentecost


By Sergei V. Bulgakov

On the Saturday before Pentecost we commemorate all departed pious Christians, with the idea that the occasion of the coming of the Holy Spirit not only consists of the economy of the salvation of man, but that the departed also participate in this salvation. Therefore, the Holy Church, sending up prayers on Pentecost for the enlivening of all the living through the Holy Spirit, petitions for the grace of the Holy Spirit also for the departed, which they were granted while they were still living, and was the source of eternal blessedness, because "all souls are enlivened through the Holy Spirit".

The Holy Church appeals to us, "Let all of us pray to Christ, today as we remember the dead of all ages": "Your servants who rest in Your courtyard, and in the bosom of Abraham, from Adam even until today who have chastely served You, fathers and our brothers, friends, together with relatives", "forefathers, grandfathers and great-grandfathers, from the first and even up to the last", "every age, the old, and young babies, and children", and "the new born babies", "every rank and generation", "kings, priests, bishops, monks and novices", "husbands together with wives", "those departed at sea, or on land, or in the rivers, wells, or lakes, or in the trenches", "in the mountains, on travel", "in the deserts, or in the cities", and "any place", "in vain pursuits, cut in half by lightning, both from deathly abomination, and any wound", "dying from Divine foreboding, all mortal thunder sent down from Heaven, the cracking of the earth, the rising storms of the sea", "to be carried away by hailstones, snow and increased clouds, or killed by a brick, or covered over with earth", "unexpected death of the pious, and from every stream of fallen trees, iron, or rocks", "was food for an animal, either birds, or reptiles", "who died from poisonous bites by the enwrapping of snakes, from being trampled by horses, from strangling and hanging by the simple-hearted", "who was killed by drinking drugs, poisons, choked on bones", "those whom You have allowed, O Lord, to die from a sudden unexpected fall", "all who repose, O Lord, piously repose", "Our Savior, deliver all the faithful departed from the ever burning fire and the never ending darkness, the gnashing of teeth, and the unending torment of worms, and every torture", "Arise on the last day with glory", "grant me Your heavenly kingdom".

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Elder Paisios: On General Prayers for the Dead


- Elder, the dead who do not have people to pray for them, are they helped by those who pray generally for the dead?

- Of course they are helped. When I pray for all the reposed, I see in my sleep my parents, because they are at rest by the prayers I do. Whenever I have a Divine Liturgy, I do a general memorial for all the reposed. If sometimes I do not pray for the reposed, the reposed who are known to me appear before me. One relative of mine, who was killed in the war, I saw in front of me after the Divine Liturgy, during the time of the Memorial Service, because I didn't have him written with the names of the reposed, since he was memorialized during the Proskomide with the other fallen heroes. And you also during the Holy Prothesis, do not only give the names of the sick, but also those of the reposed, because the reposed have great need.

Source: Translated by John Sanidopoulos
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Mythologizing Evolution


Karl Giberson, Ph.D
May 31, 2012
The Huffington Post

A prominent new atheist blogger has just completed a week-long series paying homage to the great journalist H. L. Mencken, best known for his coverage of the 1925 Scopes Trial. The series represents ongoing efforts to enhance the mythology of evolution, efforts that have been particularly successful when it comes to the Scopes Trial.

Most people today see the Scopes Trial as a simple confrontation between superstitious hillbillies who rallied around a great buffoon, William Jennings Bryan, who prosecuted a great and open-minded science teacher, John Scopes. The crime was the teaching of evolution.

Mencken was widely read and is celebrated today for his hyperbolic and uncharitable rhetoric. He ridiculed the local population in Dayton -- called them "rustic ignoramuses" -- in ways that no major news outlet would publish today. When Bryan died, shortly after the trial, Mencken wrote a most hateful obituary:

"It was plain to everyone, when Bryan came to Dayton, that his great days were behind him -- that he was now definitely an old man, and headed at last for silence. There was a vague, unpleasant manginess about his appearance; he somehow seemed dirty, though a close glance showed him carefully shaved, and clad in immaculate linen."

Such images serve the purposes of those that want evolution to be our creation myth. Anyone who rejects evolution must be, according to Mencken, an ignorant mangy buffoon. Or, as Richard Dawkins has stated, in language only slight more temperate, "stupid, wicked, or insane."

Such uncharitable caricatures of the critics of evolution make it easy to dismiss their concerns. If our critics are buffoons, we can ignore them.

Bryan was certainly wrong about evolution. But he was not a buffoon; he was a champion of liberal causes and ran three times for president on the democratic ticket. We would do well to think about the concerns that animated his anti-evolutionary campaign and brought him to Dayton. Bryan was, for example, horrified at the way German intellectuals were rationalizing the militarism that would lead Germany into World War I. A professor at the University of Leipzig published a frightening book titled "Darwinism Applied to Peoples and States" in 1910, arguing that the morally advanced European races should exterminate the morally inferior ones. He called this the "righteousness of the struggle for existence" and anticipated it would lead to the "extermination of the crude immoral hordes."

Whether or not this is an appropriate application of Darwin's ideas -- I don't think it is -- Bryan's concern along these lines certainly deserves our respect, not ridicule, and we might learn something from pondering it.

Bryan watched developments in Europe closely and warned president Woodrow Wilson that the U.S. should not enter the war. "It is not likely that either side will win so complete a victory as to be able to dictate terms," he wrote in 1914 after two years as Secretary of State, "and if either side does win such a victory it will probably mean preparation for another war. It would seem better to look for a more rational basis for peace." Bryan resigned as Wilson's Secretary of State in 1915, protesting America's entry into World War I.

The concerns about evolution that Bryan expressed -- perhaps inarticulately -- represent a dark chapter in the history of Darwin's theory that many of its champions today would like to suppress as they mythologize the story of evolution. In Bryan's day evolution was almost universally believed to sanction draconian measures to improve our species by eliminating the less fit. The textbook from which John Scopes supposedly taught evolution -- George Hunter's "A Civic Biology" -- spoke in chilling language of "parasitic" families that do harm by "corrupting, stealing, or spreading disease." The students were warned of the importance of preventing the propagation of such a "low and degenerate race."

This, of course, is the sordid tale of Social Darwinism -- a misapplication of Darwin's ideas that died in the Nazi death camps along with those the Nazis perceived to be from a "low and degenerate race."

Bryan, of course, was wrong about evolution -- although we might cut him some slack given the state of the theory then -- and his performance in Dayton certainly had a few blunders. But we should not reduce him to a caricature to avoid confronting the reality of what evolution meant for so many at that historical moment.

In the same way, we should listen more carefully to the critics of evolution today. Not all of them are stupid, wicked or insane.
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Friday, June 1, 2012

An Encouraging Story From Elder Paisios


One day we left to visit Elder Paisios - a monk, one with many children and myself. The Elder welcomed us with his known simple and cordial manner. He narrated the following story to give courage to the man with many children:

I'll tell you something that happened to me when I was in the Monastery in Konitsa. There was an icon there of the Panagia and every day I cleaned it and lit Her oil lamp. At regular intervals a rural constable would come, who had nine children, and he would tell me: "Elder, I want to go light the oil lamp of the Panagia." I responded: "Blessed one, it is lit." He insisted. So as not to upset him, I would tell him to go. Later, as he would leave, I would follow after him and clean the oil.

One day I was intrigued and said: "Why don't I go see what this blessed one is doing in there, perhaps he is making a mess?" So when he entered the church, I secretly entered behind him being overprotective. He went, therefore, to the icon of the Panagia, he dipped his hand in the oil of Her oil lamp, he touched the barrel of his weapon, he knelt, and said:

"My Panagia, the food has ended. You know!"

With what I heard I was surprised and decided to follow him. Having distanced himself from the Monastery, around three hundred meters, I saw an erect goat across from him waiting. He took out his weapon, he killed it, he loaded it on his back, and he left. That's when I understood his words to the Panagia. From then on, whenever the constable came to the Monastery and left, I would set my ear to hear the gunshot. Indeed, after five, maybe ten minutes, I heard the gunshot and said:

"Again the Panagia gave it to him."

From Pilgrim's Testimonies: Elder Paisios the Athonite (1924-1994) (Μαρτυρίες προσκυνητών: Γέροντας Παΐσιος ο Αγιορείτης (1924-1994)), pp. 38-39. Translated by John Sanidopoulos.
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Mysterious Hagia Sophia Frightens the Turks


By Niko Hilodakou

From the moment that Constantinople fell to the Ottomans and Mohammad Fattish entered the great Church of Saint Sophia on his white stallion, he remained transfixed for a long time by the icon of Christ in the dome. This is according to Turkish sources. This immense Church of Orthodoxy became the epicenter of different myths and legends which circulate amongst the conquerors eliciting an intense sense of awe for this great accomplishment of Orthodoxy which now is surrounded by four Ottoman minarets.

But during the last few years, certain events centered around Saint Sophia and specifically with the unexpected discovery of an Angel in the summer of 2008 in the dome, has elicited amongst the Turks an intense sense of suspense and fear about the future. In connection with this, all those legends have resurfaced recently and at times have shocked and brought to the Muslims a sense of fear. This fear is that the Orthodox Christian identity will once again rise up in spite of the fact that up until 1934 the Church was used as a Muslim mosque.

In this context of events, last January 20, 2012, the Turkish newspaper Sampach with a large circulation, presented a rather astonishing article about “The Mysteries of Saint Sophia.” It portrayed in a graceful way this climate of fear which has lately gripped the Turks in reference to the hidden things in the Holy Church and about all the things that will happen in the future.

The first significant element taken from that article is the indescribable fear which is revealed by the Turks concerning the hidden crosses, both symbolical and not, which are found on the interior of the Church and are also seen by the ground plan of the Church from above. As such, the Turks express great awe for the so-called “Cross of the Apostle Saint Andrew.” As is well known he is the founder of the Church of Constantinople. According to the newspaper Sampach, a Cross of Saint Andrew is found on the roof of the Church etched in a diagonal form. It is a significant symbol which not only was not lost throughout the ages of the Ottoman occupation but also dominates the area with its symbolic meaning. In addition to this, “The Cross of Justinian” freaks out the Turks. The legends as well refer to a very ancient jewel which is found mystically in Saint Sophia and in fact comes from Egypt and it has great power. Generally speaking, the construction of this "Great Orthodox Architectural Masterpiece", according to the same Turkish sources, is based on the Christian symbol of the Cross and this reality generates a sense of awe and fear about the future return of Saint Sophia to its traditional occupants, in other words, to Hellenic Orthodox worship.

But in addition to the crosses, the Turks refer to other mysterious and fearful things that are found in the interior of the Church. As is referred to in the legend, it is known that after the Church was turned into a Muslim mosque, the well-known Muslim Mihramp was built. It is the Muslim place of prayer. It is found on the eastern side of the Church in the direction of Mecca. But great interest is found, according to the Turkish legends, to that which in front of the Mihramp. A casket is buried there constructed of bronze gilded with gold. In this casket lays the body of Queen Sophia. Most likely her name is in reference to Saint Sophia. This Queen Sophia and her casket are connected, according to Turkish legend with a commandment that has existed for centuries up to the present day. This commandment directs that no one should ever disturb the casket, not even to touch it. If something like that should happen, then according to the legend it will initiate the rising of Queen Sophia. If this should happen then a frightful noise shall shake the whole structure of the Church initiating eschatological seismic events that will frighten the Turks.

This legend of Queen Sophia continues as follows. According to Turkish references, the casket is protected by four Archangels who are found on the dome of the Church. These Archangels, who the Turks believe exist, are: Tzemprael, Michael, Israfel and Azarael. The Turks say that Tzemprael protects the Byzantine Emperors, Michael protects the Church from hostile attacks, while Tzemprael and Israfel were those who proclaimed the events leading to hostile attacks. Tzemprael and Israfel were the angels that proclaimed the events of the warring efforts of the Byzantine Emperors. And these four Archangels have been assigned after the Fall of Constantinople to protect the casket of Queen Sophia from the danger of someone profane who might try to open it and bring about the Second Coming of Christ.

Another important legend which is referred to by the Muslims is the legend “Of the Hidden Patriarch” which is similar to the Greek legend about the “hidden priest.” As it is referred in Turkish tradition, on the south side of the Church is a narrow passageway. The passageway leads to a very old web covered mysterious door which is referred to in the legend as “The Closed Door.” According to Turkish references, when Mohammed Fattish entered Constantinople, the last Greek Orthodox Patriarch and his whole escort entered through that door which closed behind them. From that moment these people disappeared while the door remained hermetically sealed and no one ever dares to open it. Every year during the Resurrection Service of the Orthodox Christians, according to the Turkish newspaper Sampach, red eggs appear in front of this door. The legend is completed in prophecy, which frightens the Turks, that when the door is opened, Orthodox Christian chanting will be heard in the Church again. This is why the Turks are frightened simply by thinking about opening this mysterious door.

The Turkish newspaper reports about a mysterious underground tunnel that exists in a central location in the interior of the Church. As is reported, there is a double door which leads to a big tunnel. This tunnel, as reported by the Turkish newspaper, leads to Prinkoniso (Princes' Islands), and as far as the island Proti. The mystery for the Turks is how this tunnel was constructed and what role did it play in the long history of the Church.

Another mystery for the Turks is the imprint of the sole of a large animal, maybe an elephant, which is found on the southwestern section of the dome. And here it is reported that this is in reference to some eschatological stories. According to the Turks this imprint is from the horse of Mohammed the Conqueror. But the question is how the horse was able to step upon a place that is so high on the dome.

Great awe is elicited among the Turks, as referred to by the newspaper Sampach, by the various mosaics which have been uncovered with all their glory during the last ten years in the Church of Saint Sophia. This is in spite of the fact that the Muslim faith considers it a sin to create images of people who are related to religious events. They feel special awe about the mosaic which depicts Jesus with the Virgin Mary and John the Baptist on the right and left of Him. The Turks have named them “The Mosaic of the Apocalypse.” And its symbolism opens up to us its eschatological meaning which is very intense with the Muslim Turks.

Specific attention is made about the mosaic which depicts known Byzantine Emperors such as John Komnenos with Jesus Christ and the Emperor Constantine Monomachos with the Empress Zoe. All of these depictions elicit intense awe about this Greek Orthodox Christian majesty and the inner strength which emerge from these mosaics. They have generated different legends about their eschatological symbolism. These symbolisms are related to the Turkish phobias about the reestablishment and authority of the Holy Eastern Roman Empire with the blessing of Jesus Christ.

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Do I View Others as Bigger Sinners?


By Dan Delzell

One huge indicator of spiritual health and maturity is when a Christian views his sin as being at least as great, if not greater, than the sins of others. The apostle Paul described his own attitude this way: "Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners - of whom I am the worst." (1 Timothy 1:15) Paul ministered to people out of that deep sense of being a bigger sinner than anyone he was trying to reach with the Gospel.

Spiritual pride leads me to think that others are bigger sinners than me. In fact, if that attitude is present in the heart and mind of a believer, it is impossible to grow spiritually. The minute I begin to entertain that arrogant attitude, I start to carry myself with an air of superiority toward others. That "air" is very different than the "breath" of the Holy Spirit inside believers. He will never lead me to think highly of myself....ever.

It is very natural to become proud of my "righteous efforts" for the Lord. It is also natural to compare my works and my life of discipleship to that of others. A mature disciple of Christ does not live according to the natural way of looking at others. A mature disciple is filled with the Holy Spirit....and therefore, he or she has tons of compassion for anyone caught in sin....and anyone who does not know Christ. Simply put, mature disciples don't view others as bigger sinners.

Most of the Pharisees mentioned in the New Testament were not known for their humility. In one instance, "The Pharisee stood up and prayed about himself: 'God, I thank you that I am not like other men - robbers, evildoers, adulterers - or even like this tax collector.'" (Luke 18:11) Notice that as he compared himself in his mind with others, he truly thought that his personal righteousness was superior. That is where he went way off the rails. He was trusting in his personal righteousness....rather than in the righteousness of Christ.

The Pharisee went on to say, "I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get." (Luke 18:12) Those were a couple things which he felt made him superior to others. How sad. He didn't get it. None of us have any righteousness of our own that is even one cut above anyone else. As long as we concentrate on our own "righteous acts," we will continue to live in pride and self-deception.

Meanwhile, "the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, 'God, have mercy on me, a sinner.'" (Luke 18:13) Wow....what a difference in attitude. He did not consider himself worthy before God....and therefore, he didn't waste his time comparing himself to others. He was so aware of his own sinfulness that he didn't fall into the trap which had ensnared the Pharisee.

How aware are you of your own sinfulness....relative to your awareness of the sins of others? Your spiritual health will depend largely upon whose sin you are looking at....and where you are turning to find the cure for your sinful attitudes and behavior.

Take this quick test. Ask yourself this question. "Who are the biggest sinners?" Your instant response will tell you a lot about your spiritual health. Did your mind go immediately to others....or to yourself? If it went to others, here is the way to deal with spiritual pride. Admit it to yourself, and to God. Confess that sin to the Lord. Ask Him to forgive you because of the cross of Jesus. He will.

Then ask the Lord to give you a new heart, and a new mind....one that has genuine humility. Ask Him for it everyday....and then one of these days, ask yourself that question again. Before long, you will hopefully be able to truthfully say what Paul said: "Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners - of whom I am the worst." (1 Timothy 1:15) That mindset and heartfelt perspective is an essential attribute of a healthy disciple....and it is a God-given attitude that must be in our hearts before we can be used by God to reach anyone for Christ.

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Church of the Holy Sepulcher Comes Alive at Night


May 31, 2012
Associated Press

After the last tourists leave the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem's Old City at nightfall, a little-known but centuries-old tradition unfolds at one of Christianity's holiest sites.

Clerics from the three largest denominations represented in the church — Greek Orthodox, Armenian and Roman Catholic — gather each night for special prayers reserved for the men who take care of the site where Christians believe Jesus was crucified, buried and resurrected.

Starting at midnight, clerics and monks sing and pray for hours, their chants echoing through the cavernous chambers of the Holy Sepulcher's darkest rooms.

"The door of the church is closed, no pilgrims, no tourists, it's very quiet," said Father Isidoros Fakitsas, the superior of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate at the church. "It's amazing to feel the liturgy with no people, only the monks."

Isidoros said he has attended the services for 21 years.

The preparations require a rigid routine. Before the first prayers of the new day, the Christian shrine needs to be cleaned, and maintenance work has to be done.

The clerics sweep the floors, replace oil lamps and clean candle holders, after thousands of pilgrims visited throughout the previous day. Occasionally a small number of devoted pilgrims help them with the cleanup and are permitted to stay and pray inside the church all night.

The early morning mass is a tradition associated with monastic life, said Father Eugenio Alliata, professor of Christian Archaeology at the Studium Biblicum Franciscanum in Jerusalem. "Mostly monks and religious people want to pray not only all the day, but also all the night, or part of the day or part of the night. It is part of the desire to pray without ceasing because prayers to God must be given all the time, day and night," Alliata said.

Father Fergus Clarke, the guardian for the Franciscan community inside the Holy Sepulcher, said the night prayers require a certain amount of personal sacrifice, but also bring greater spiritual fulfillment. "That's a wonderful vocation ... to be able to do something like that, to know that while people are sleeping, others are praying," he said.

The night liturgies inside the Holy Sepulcher are regulated by a consolidated tradition: The Greek-Orthodox start to celebrate mass inside Jesus' Tomb at 12:30 a.m., before handing over to the Armenians and then the Franciscans. The Greek Orthodox liturgy at the tomb is the longest, lasting for about three and a half hours; the Armenians then take over for an hour and a half and the Franciscans for another half hour.

The night service is subject to some variations. On the feast of Saint Matthias on the morning of May 14, for example, Catholics lead a procession to Jesus' tomb during the Greek Orthodox liturgy.

Sounds collided with one another that night. The celestial voices of Armenian priests rose from their wing of the Church as the sound of a Franciscan pipe organ came from the opposite direction.

Competing for attention is nothing new in the ancient church. The three main denominations that share the church jealously guard their turf, and an air of mistrust lingers as each group makes sure no one else crosses into their space.

While the Tomb of Jesus and the main passages of the Holy Sepulcher are considered common spaces, the three main religious communities each own a part of the church: The Chapel of Saint Helen, near the place where Jesus' cross is said to have been found, belongs to the Armenians; the Greek-Orthodox Church has ownership over the largest part of the church, including the Altar of the Calvary, where Jesus's cross was raised; the Franciscans own the Chapel of the Crucifixion where Jesus was crucified, along with the northern part of the Church, where according to tradition Jesus appeared to his mother.

The church was first built by Roman Emperor Constantine in 325, at the site where the tomb of Jesus was believed to have been found.

Constantine's structure was destroyed in 1009 by Muslim Caliph al-Hakim. A 12th century restoration by the Crusaders gave the Holy Sepulcher its current appearance.

Life inside the Holy Sepulcher is regulated by a complex maze of norms that are often subject to different interpretations, said Father Samuel Aghoyan, the Armenian Superior of the Holy Sepulcher. At times, tensions have even spilled over into violence, with monks pushing and punching each other.

"We keep almost awake at night here to see that things are done properly, on time, that no one will trespass the other's right by doing things that he's not supposed to do," said Father Samuel. "So we have to be careful and watch what we do or what they do."
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Honoring Those Who Have Passed


May 31, 2012
Sean Scully
The Weekly Calistogan

Nonna and Vsevolog Blinoff have traveled from San Francisco to Calistoga’s Pioneer Cemetery every year for decades to clean the graves of Ivan Dementy (1871-1941) and his wife Anna Dementy (1879-1953), even though the couples never met. Mrs. Blinoff said she discovered the overgrown graves many years ago and recognized them as fellow Russian Orthodox Church members by the distinctive crosses on the headstones. She maintains the graves as an act of devotion to her coreligionists. The couple spent Monday’s Memorial Day scraping moss and lichen from the tombs.
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Thursday, May 31, 2012

Newly-Revealed Hieromartyr Vlasios of Sklavaina

Hieromartyr Vlasios (Blaise) of Sklavaina (Feast Day – February 11 and December 9)

The Miraculous Uncovering of the Relics

One of the gifts from God to men is the revelation of St. Vlasios of Akarnanos and those martyred with him, in the year 1923 in the town of Palairou Sklavainon, Akarnanias. The small and unassuming town of Sklavaina is found at the base of the Mountains of Akarnanos a short distance from Palairou, and in the 1923 it was experiencing wondrous events.

For a few years before, the inhabitants of Sklavaina would see a priest in their sleep, who told them to dig to uncover his relics, indicating a certain place. None, however, knew where to dig, and fearing ridicule from others they kept it to themselves. The only thing they did was to build an icon stand in the place where the Saint showed them he was buried, in the name of St. Vlasios, Bishop of Sebaste. The dreams, however, continued much more, and St. Vlasios became more austere. And again, however, there was still hesitation.

The Saint especially appeared to Ms. Euphrosyne Katsara, a simple and pious woman who had dedicated her life to the worship of the Trinitarian God.

One night, Euphrosyne was staying at her daughter Sophia's house, who was suffering from typhoid fever and was on her death bed. During the night, while Euphrosyne was up praying, the room was illumined by an indescribable light and the doors and windows opened automatically. Amidst the light could be discerned the form of a venerable priest, dressed in a priestly stole, and holding a shepherd's rod in his hand. His form and appearance Euphrosyne discerned in detail, though her daughter could only see the light.

Then this priest turned towards Euphrosyne and told her: "Euphrosyne, I am St. Vlasios. Follow me that I may show you the place to dig to uncover my relics. I can't bear the sheep to trample upon me."

It should be noted that the tomb of the Saint had become a sheep pen.

Euphrosyne, astonished by what she experienced, took courage, and approached the Saint in all her simplicity: "My Saint, it is dark, and I would be eaten by wild dogs. And also, my child is very sick."

The Saint replied: "Follow me, Euphrosyne, and don't be afraid." And taking out a cross from around his neck, he made the sign of the cross on her sick daughter. Then, Euphrosyne took courage and followed the Saint into the night.

The darkness, however, dissolved by the light of the Saint. Reaching a place about 100 meters from the Saint's house, he told her: "Dig here", and began to mark the dirt with his rod in a circle. Having returned Euphrosyne to her house, he disappeared. There, her daughter had greatly improved, and in a few days she was totally healed. From that time on, St. Vlasios would appear to her and guide her.

Euphrosyne faced disbelief and skepticism from her neighbors. The Saint, however, continued his appearances to others, so that Euphrosyne would be believed. And at one point they began to dig in the place where they were shown. Euphrosyne told them that she had been informed by the Saint that his relics would be found on the third day of their work. On the second day, however, the worker despaired of their lack of progress, and dropped his tools and left. He eventually returned at Euphrosyne's insistence, and thus they reached the third day of their work.

At noon, as they were ready to abandon their efforts, they hit something hard. Waves of emotion and hope hit all those around, and banished their disbelief. When they removed the covering, a heavenly fragrance filled the air. The holy relics of the Saint were found! Their joy was indescribable. Among the relics were found a cross and five nails that looked as if they had been made that instant, and a stone plaque which wrote the date of 1006.

Euphrosyne, having gathered the relics with reverence, cleaned them and placed them back in the tomb. And though it was raining, the rain and winds did not affect them.

Then St. Vlasios appeared again to her and said: "I am happy that you found my relics, but you did not uncover my skull. As a result, you should keep digging to uncover it from the earth." And in reality, they began their work again, and found the Skull of the Saint.

The Saint directed that they build the Holy Altar of a church, by the blessing of the then Metropolitan of Aitolias and Akarnanias, who had gone himself to the tomb of the Saint to dig. St. Vlasios appeared and guided the founding of his church, appearing to people by day and by night. He was among them and strengthened them.

After the founding of the church, the Saint told Euphrosyne to go to Lefkada to a certain man who would paint the icon of the Saint. The iconographer, however, depicted St. Vlasios, Bishop of Sebaste. At the Saint's wishes, he made a new icon as the Saint was described by Euphrosyne.


The Life of St. Vlasios, as was revealed to the faithful

Details from the life and martyrdom of St. Vlasios were revealed to Euphrosyne, Fr. Arsenios Tsantalio, and Elder Paisios the Athonite.

St. Vlasios was an abbot or retired bishop in the Holy Monastery of the Entrance of the Theotokos, which was in the region of Sklavainon-Zaverdas, now Plairo. He endured death by martyrdom by Muslim pirates together with his fellow five monastics, and a multitude of Christian men, women and children in his flock, for their faith in Christ. He was beheaded, having previously been slowly nailed with five nails in his body, as was revealed at the uncovering of his relics. The executioners tried to burn the Saint's body, but it did not burn. The Christians who were saved returned and buried St. Vlasios, together with his five fellow martyrs, in a common tomb. The rest of the Christians were buried in a large mass grave.

Their martyrdom occurred on the 19th of December, a Sunday.

The revelations surrounding the life of St. Vlasios did not stop when God was well-pleased to reveal his holy relics. Many other new facts came to light in recent years. The continuous appearance of the Saint, and his continuous wonderworking power at the appeal to his holy name placed him as a bright star in the firmament. Much more could be written about it.


St. Vlasios Appears to Elder Paisios

Archimandrite Augoustinos Katsabires had entreated Elder Paisios to pray that the newly-revealed St. Vlasios of Sklavaina would appear to him. He hoped to learn his appearance so he could paint his icon.

It was the 21st of January 1980, the evening of the Sunday of the Prodigal Son. The Elder, having prayed at night in his cell with the prayer rope, saw appear before him amidst uncreated light an unknown Saint wearing a monastic mandya (of an abbot). Next to him on the wall of his cell, above the stove appeared the ruins of a Monastery. He felt indescribable joy and exultation, and wondered: "Which Saint is this?" Then he heard a voice from the Church: "It is St. Vlasios from Sklavaina."

Out of gratitude, and to thank the Saint for the honor which he showed him, he traveled to Sklavaina to venerate his grace-flowing relics.

Mr. Apostolos Papachristou mentions: "May 20, 1980, the Elder came to my house in Agrinio with the desire to travel to Sklavaina of Xeromeros to venerate the holy relics of St. Vlasaios of Sklavaina, after the Saint appeared to him in his cell. He stayed in our house one night and though we laid out clean linens for him, the Elder left them totally unused. When he went to Sklavaina, he venerated the Saint with prostrations, and taught all those around him.

Following this, the Elder ordered the icon of St. Vlasios from the Holy Monastery of the Holy Trinity, Koropi, Attica, having described the Saint's characteristics to the iconographer nun. When he received the icon, he was relieved, for she had exactly captured the Saint's image. He said: "It appears that the sister had piety and wrote this icon with prayer and fasting."

Every year he honored St. Vlasios' memory with a vigil alone in his cell. He, however, did not celebrate it on February 11th (the same day as the feast of St. Vlasios of Sebaste) when his memory is celebrated, but on December 19th, the day when he was martyred.


Apolytikion in the Third Tone
A new sun has shone upon us, though you struggled in former years, by the revelation of your divine relics, O our father, Hieromartyr Vlasios, you shine upon us with divine grace, therefore intercede with the Lord Who glorified you, that we be granted great mercy.


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Labels: Elder Paisios the Athonite, Iconography, Newly-Revealed Saints, Saints, Shrines and Relics
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How To Distinguish A False Prophet From A True One


From The Shepherd of Hermas:

“How then, sir,” say I, “will a man know which of them is the prophet, and which the false prophet?”

“I will tell you,” says he, “about both the prophets, and then you can try the true and the false prophet according to my directions.

Try the man who has the Divine Spirit by his life. First, he who has the Divine Spirit proceeding from above is meek, and peaceable, and humble, and refrains from all iniquity and the vain desire of this world, and contents himself with fewer wants than those of other men, and when asked he makes no reply; nor does he speak privately, nor when man wishes the Spirit to speak does the Holy Spirit speak, but He speaks only when God wishes Him to speak. When, then, a man having the Divine Spirit comes into an assembly of righteous men who have faith in the Divine Spirit, and this assembly of men offers up prayer to God, then the angel of the prophetic Spirit, who is destined for him, fills the man; and the man being filled with the Holy Spirit, speaks to the multitude as the Lord wishes. Thus, then, will the Spirit of Divinity become manifest. Whatever power therefore comes from the Spirit of Divinity belongs to the Lord.

Hear, then,” says he, “in regard to the spirit which is earthly, and empty, and powerless, and foolish. First, the man who seems to have the Spirit exalts himself, and wishes to have the first seat, and is bold, and impudent, and talkative, and lives in the midst of many luxuries and many other delusions, and takes rewards for his prophecy; and if he does not receive rewards, he does not prophesy. Can, then, the Divine Spirit take rewards and prophesy? It is not possible that the prophet of God should do this, but prophets of this character are possessed by an earthly spirit. Then it never approaches an assembly of righteous men, but shuns them. And it associates with doubters and the vain, and prophesies to them in a corner, and deceives them, speaking to them, according to their desires, mere empty words: for they are empty to whom it gives its answers. For the empty vessel, when placed along with the empty, is not crushed, but they correspond to each other. When, therefore, he comes into an assembly of righteous men who have a Spirit of Divinity, and they offer up prayer, that man is made empty, and the earthly spirit tees from him through fear, and that man is made dumb, and is entirely crushed, being unable to speak. For if you pack closely a storehouse with wine or oil, and put an empty jar in the midst of the vessels of wine or oil, you will find that jar empty as when you placed it, if you should wish to clear the storehouse. So also the empty prophets, when they come to the spirits of the righteous, are found [on leaving] to be such as they were when they came.

This, then, is the mode of life of both prophets. Try by his deeds and his life the man who says that he is inspired. But as for you, trust the Spirit which comes from God, and has power; but the spirit which is earthly and empty trust not at all, for there is no power in it: it comes from the devil.

Hear, then, the parable which I am to tell you. Take a stone, and throw it to the sky, and see if you can touch it. Or again, take a squirt of water and squirt into the sky, and see if you can penetrate the sky.”

“How, sir,” say I, “can these things take place? For both of them are impossible.”

“As these things,” says he, “are impossible, so also are the earthly spirits powerless and pithless. But look, on the other hand, at the power which comes from above. Hail is of the size of a very small grain, yet when it falls on a man’s head how much annoyance it gives him! Or, again, take the drop which falls from a pitcher to the ground, and yet it hollows a stone. You see, then, that the smallest things coming from above have great power when they fall upon the earth. Thus also is the Divine Spirit, which comes from above, powerful. Trust, then, that Spirit, but have nothing to do with the other.”
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Labels: Apostles and Early Church, Cults, Heresy, Prophecies
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