Showing posts with label Christianity Today. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christianity Today. Show all posts

October 3, 2022

The Topic That Tests the Faith of a Christian (Photios Kontoglou)


"When you speak to pseudochristians about strict asceticism of the body and the spirit for the love of Christ, they get angry, they call you a fakir, an idolater, a barbarian. If you want to test the faith of a Christian, speak to them about asceticism."

- Photios Kontoglou
 
 

September 18, 2021

"Orthodox Popes" (Metr. Hierotheos of Nafpaktos)


 By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

According to the decisions of the First Vatican Council, the Pope is defined as "infallible" when he speaks "ex cathedra", he is then superior to Councils and in fact the Ecumenical Councils, since he decides whether or not the Council decides correctly.

Against this mentality which created many afflictions in Western Christianity, the Reformed Protestants appeared, who not only questioned the infallibility of the Pope, but ended up at the point where everyone is a pope, who can judge everyone else.

Unfortunately, this mentality was also introduced into the Orthodox Church by clergy and theologians, and is expressed as an "Orthodox Papism", when every theologian expresses a papal mentality, when they come to the point of denying the synodal institution of the Church.

December 14, 2015

The Martyrdom of Contemporary Christians (Metr. Hierotheos of Nafpaktos)

The Cross and Skull of the Apostle Andrew

Below is a homily by Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou, delivered on the feast of the Holy Apostle Andrew, on the 30th of November 2015, in the Cathedral of the Apostle Andrew in Patras, Greece.

Each saint is celebrated on the day of their dormition or the day of their martyrdom, because this day is considered their birthday, a particular charism. Saint John Chrysostom considers martyrdom a charism, which he describes as a spirit of power, for a person receives strength from the Holy Spirit to sacrifice themselves. "When they receive the charism of martyrdom, it is said they have the spirit of power, that is, a charism." And because "that which is gifted is from the Holy Spirit, the charism is also called a gift." Martyrdom is thus a charism, a spirit of power, a gift. This is how Christian martyrdom is different from any other self-sacrifice for an ideology.

July 19, 2015

St. Porphyrios on Being a First Century Christian Today


According to St. Porphyrios of Kavsokalyva:

"Christians who live for themselves are not Christians, because they do not live ecclesiastically. A true Christian lives for God and their fellow people, imitating the Christians of the early Church. We will live according to the example of the first Christians,* when we live 'coenobitically' [common will, common substance, common property, everything common]. The genuine ecclesiastical life of Acts, should be the prototype of today's ecclesiastical communities and parishes. Then, in the first 200 years of Christianity, the ecclesiastical community operated as a large Coenobium. This primordial perfect ecclesiastical Christian life [the unity in Christ and in community] has survived until today in Orthodox Monasteries/Coenobiums. The way of life of monastic parishes [namely Coenobitic Monasteries] should become the prototype of today's secular parishes [ecclesiastical communities that operate in the world]."

December 10, 2014

Christianity, the Light of Humanity


By Archimandrite Chrysostomos K. Papathanasiou

Christianity is the revelation of the true God to humanity. It is not an ideological construction or a human philosophy.

We did not discover God, but He revealed Himself to us when His infinite love willed it.

August 12, 2014

Archbishop Irinaios of Crete: "We Need a New Direction and New Course"


Helen Bouchalaki
July 1, 2014

In the context of change and upheaval in every human life in general and in Crete in particular, News Creta spoke with Archbishop Irinaios of Crete. Here is the interview:

- We are living in strange and difficult times in which all of humanity is possessed with uncertainty and anxiety. Particularly on the island of Crete do you judge that this phenomenon is more limited?

August 11, 2014

Holiness and Martyrdom in our Times: A Beneficial Interview


Holiness, asceticism, discernment and martyrdom are great riches of our Church that move us, attract us, transform us and save us from the distractions and lies of this world in every era.

In an interview with His Eminence Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou, he gives answers to the questions of a journalist (George Theoharis from Agioritikovima.gr) on these issues, and speaks of other aspects of ecclesiastical life.

+++

Question: Your Eminence, many people are unsure if saints exist today. What do you say?

May 16, 2014

Do We Want To Be Christians Without Christ? (Photios Kontoglou)


By Photios Kontoglou

When you talk to pseudo-christians about hard asceticism of the body and spirit for the love of Christ, they become angered, calling you a fakir, pagan or barbarian.

If you want to test the faith of a Christian, talk to them about asceticism. The faithful will feel compunction, while the lukewarm, those who are fake and faithless, will protest.

What about the sayings of Christ: "Blessed are they who have left all and followed Me," or "The kingdom of heaven suffers violence, and the violent take it by force," or "In the world you will have sorrow," or "Tight is the gate and narrow is the way that leads to life."

February 20, 2014

The Search For Contemporary Flagbearing Elders


By Monk Moses the Athonite

We have written before how many of our contemporary Christians are seeking contemporary flagbearing Elders.

In certain times it is a fact that there is a real need for solving serious problem. In other times there is simply curiosity and the search for discerning Elders is for information regarding the signs of the times, impending wars and prophetic revelations. For one to seek a modest and truly humble Elder, with knowledge and love, wisdom and prayer, grace and blessing, is wise and blessed. The faithful have serious needs, but also sometimes frivolous illnesses. This is why fear of God and great attention are needed from both sides.

January 27, 2014

Contemporary Man and the Spiritual Life


On Thursday, 23 January 2014, over 600 people filled a room at Eleon Loft in Athens to hear a lecture by the Abbot of the Sacred Monastery of Vatopaidi, Elder Ephraim, on the topic "Contemporary Man and the Spiritual Life".

Among those in attendance were His Eminence Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Dodona, party members, community leaders, clergy, monastics, students and many people.

After opening with a prayer, he said among other things the following:

January 13, 2014

The Witness of Orthodoxy Today


By George I. Mantzaridis
Emeritus Professor of Ethics and Sociology

Sir Steven Runciman, the noted Byzantinist, in his last interview said: "Sometimes I am disappointed by the other churches. Nevertheless, it pleases me to think that before one hundred years pass, Orthodoxy will be the only remaining historical Church. I believe that she offers the real spirituality which the other churches can no longer offer."(1) If this foreboding rings true, then the universality of Orthodoxy becomes current. At the same time its apostolicity, which is one of the four distinctive features of the Church according to the Creed, is emphatically presented on the modern stage.

Apostolicity links the Church together with historical and institutional origin, while at the same time it denotes character and perspective. The Church of Christ is Apostolic because her origins and teachings are based upon the Apostles of Christ. Besides, the Lord’s command to the Apostles had universal scope: "Go therefore and make disciples of all nations."(2)

Christ was born as a man through the lineage of Judah to redeem the people of Israel and the whole world.(3) He did not overlook the other races and nations but recapitulated all in His theandric (Divine-Human) Body, namely the Church. Although the twelve Apostles represent the twelve races of Israel, they assume ecumenical conscience and teach "all the nations". Racial, national and other kinds of divisive characterizations exist before death’s borders. The Church, rooted upon the truth and actual experience of the victory over death, does not disregard such divisions, yet she transcends the distinctions and unites the entire world in one and undivided body.

The racial and national divisions existing during the time of the Apostles still exist today. Even idolatry powerfully introduces itself in both the non-Christian and Christian worlds in one of its most ancient forms, that of covetousness. The present age believes in money and is directed by capital. Capital governs man, corrupts his morals, shapes his social life and determines political choices.

The Holy Bible and the Fathers of the Church directly relate man’s freedom and justification to a detachment from money and to the broadening of one’s conscience to embrace the entire world. The Gospel indicates the metaphysical dimensions that money potentially acquires transforming itself and becoming Mammon.(4)

St. Paul says that avarice is idolatry.(5) The Fathers of the Church also condemn avarice as a crime.(6) However, the contraction of the ecumenical conscience of a Christian and the return to a nationalistic outlook of perception is also to be identified with idolatry.

Man has infinite value. In himself the persona is a kind of centre capable of containing in himself the whole fullness of divinity and humanity.(7) This is the claim of Christian anthropology, which is neglected by the Christian world but preserved in Orthodox Theology. It is true that on a moral and social level the traditionally Orthodox peoples may not hold a superior position compared to the non-Orthodox. This is because of the secularization that began in the West and was ultimately transplanted in the East, resulting in disadvantaging the Orthodox. The desire to imitate and the inherent difficulty to assimilate and exploit foreign cultural elements created personal and social turmoil. Nevertheless, the superiority of Orthodoxy stems from its theological foundations. Orthodoxy remains as a pure truth of Christian Faith. In the Orthodox Church, Christian truth is unspoiled and the eschatological perspective of Christianity is preserved. This is Orthodoxy’s greatest value and this guarantees the quality of what the Church profess to the world.

For the Orthodox, self-criticism and repentance is essential. From this perspective we see the challenge the Orthodox Church faces with globalization. When the spirit of the world in the form of avarice, love for power, religious syncretism, nationalism, liberalism or conservatism, entraps Orthodoxy in the inevitable web of corruption and death, the reduction or relativization of Orthodoxy’s absolute and universal spirit can be fatal.

Should the Orthodox Church rest upon a conventional presence in the contemporary world, should the Church fail to respond to today’s challenges with Christ’s universal spirit, man will be without help. Man will submit to globalization’s homogenization. However, if the Church fosters the spirit of Tradition on a personal and community level, the truth of Christ’s universality will trump the illusion of globalization.

Present perspectives are disappointing. All phenomena betray the crisis and portend the inevitable explosion. If man’s focus is on individual interests and man neglects fellow-man, society is undermined and is lead to an impasse. The economic growth model becomes the author of self-destruction. The rich grow richer with modern capitalism since wealth is retained by those that are wealthy. The poor grow poorer because the model’s cyclical fluctuations and inherent need to sustain viability affect the income of the poor the most. This process can only lead to self-implosion.

The solution shall surface only when man decides to turn his eyes outward to his surroundings; when he decides to follow a basic Christian precept: "Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others."(8) When everyone takes interest in their fellow-man, when the interests of others are in our focus, when man recognizes the benefit of others as the ultimate goal of work, then man will take the right place in human society. At that time man shall ascertain that his true self, his true being, lies in his neighbour.

Yet, all these are not simply human choices. They emerge as a consequence of man’s spiritual rebirth. Specifically, they spring as fruits of man’s participation in the life of Christ. The one who follows Christ and becomes a partaker of His death and resurrection, enters into the perspective of His universality. Whether the individual is an ordained priest or lay person, he is summoned to bear the grace of the "royal priesthood"(9) and to offer services in the work of the reconciliation of the whole world, which is accomplished through Christ. This requires intense asceticism and prayer, which in turn reveals the image of God in man.(10)

Every person, and Humanity as a whole, are an image of God. This iconological character of man makes necessary the nexus between man and God. When a person ceases to reflect God in his being, he becomes self-deleted. He becomes the image of nothing. Man’s reference to God is what gives substance to his hypostasis. It makes man a partaker of the Divine Being, a god by grace: "I say, you are gods, sons of the Most High, all of you."(11)

Such a high perspective for man and his life forms the ideal of the Orthodox Church. Besides, the Church is a "communion of deification".(12) The Church is the community constituted by the Presence of the Holy Spirit which elevates us to the status of the Universality of Christ. Yet, this elevation of humanity is concurrently given and demanded. It is offered as a donation from Christ in His Church, but it also has to be accomplished by the faithful through the activation of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. This achievement is not a painless process, yet it becomes possible by the means of humility and kenotic [i.e. self-emptying] love.

Man cannot easily chasten himself or get rid of his egotism to accept his fellow-man. Although the loving disposition is inherent to human nature, a lack of true love does characterize the "fallen" man. True love is revealed only through the sacrifice of egotism. The model for this love is the Triune God. Unity in the Holy Trinity is accomplished through the kenotic and loving inter-penetration of the Divine Persons, thereby being the model for the unity of Humanity and for the creation of the communion of deification.

Such love was revealed to the world by Christ. This kind of love is what the Orthodox Church proposes to man for his salvation, which is identified with his becoming a universal person. In the Church the believer is called to live the universal tragedy which runs through history, in order to proceed through repentance to the universal reconciliation, to the catholic communion of love. In this way the entire world is fraternized and every man is opened to universality.

The ascendance to such a perspective of life requires great effort. The created and corruptible man is summoned to assume the ethos of the uncreated and timeless Being. Undoubtedly, this is not achieved by his powers only. Orthodox Theology always speaks about the synergy between God and man. The limit of this synergy is death. In the final analysis, death proves man’s fidelity to God and his faith that death has been defeated. In this way the barrier of death is broken down and the new creation of the New Covenant is revealed. That is why, according to St Paul, the New Testament is not "man’s gospel".(13)

Many people characterize our age as a post-Christian age. This must mean two things: First, that the former ages were Christian. Moreover, that our age is no longer Christian and that Christianity has nothing more to offer. This premise is twice mistaken. Because neither the former period was Christian, nor is the potential of Christianity ever exhausted, with nothing more to offer for the present and future. This does not mean that Christianity has not affected the past and the present. It means that Christianity has not been lived in its authentic dimensions by the masses.(14)

Christianity is person-centred. The individual is not seen as being subject to the impersonal whole, nor juxtaposed to the community. Christianity perceives the person as being in communion in the Church, and sees in every man the ability to reflect in his person all humanity. Consequently, Christianity does not seek to amend society by altering social structures. It seeks the amendment of society in the amendment of each person. In this perspective Christianity prioritizes the internal unification of man, which is achievable through the reunion of the intellect to the heart. In this reunion lies the essence of godly hesychia (i.e. quietude, quiet contemplation or solitude; the practice of the prayer of the heart), a basic element of Orthodox Tradition.

In our turbulent age the reminiscence of hesychia seems unrealistic. This does not mean that it is beyond one’s reach or, worse, that it is useless. Orthodox hesychia means not stagnancy or dullness but self-concentration and intense activity on the level of the inner man. It is the presupposition for the internal reorganization of man and the establishment of his relationship with God and his neighbour. In the confusion of noises and information that our present society offers, man can easily lose his identity and humanity. Unless he concentrates on himself and returns to a true relationship with God and his fellow-man, all human progress is condemned to annihilation. That is why devout hesychia is a priority which leads to man’s perfection. This is in essence real social activism and missionary work.(15)

Orthodox Theology was cultivated throughout the ages through internal hesychia, which creates the conditions for the spiritual experience and for the avoidance of the alienating influence of the world.(16) The witness of the Orthodox Church in the contemporary world will be authentic and convincing only if it comes out of silence and hesychia. Hesychia, as perceived by Orthodoxy, can bring about a creative explosion of activity, which is man’s only hope amidst the suffocating fetters masterly scattered to the entire world by recent globalization. This spiritual explosion will promote the disclosure of the authentic human person in the impersonal globalized society. The counter-offer of the Orthodox Church to activistic globalization is the hesychastic universality.

The authentic human is universal. In this universal person the world can find its universality. The Saints were such persons. In the person of the Saint the whole of creation is sanctified. Moreover, in the principal holy figure, the Mother of God, lies the "universal joy"(17) and the "universal glory".(18) Unless we see the ontological content of the human person in this unfathomable depth we can not rightly experience the mystery of the Church.

The Orthodox Church, with her theological and ascetic tradition summed up in the Divine Liturgy, preserved the aforementioned perspective, something that can not be affirmed for the western theological tradition. Principal tenets of Orthodox Theology and asceticism, such as the teaching about the real communion between God and the world, the kenotic love, which culminates in the love for the enemies, and hesychasm, which rescues the priority of the human person, form essential presuppositions for the restoration of the alienated Christian world.

In the Divine Liturgy the believer experiences the communion with God and the whole world. He participates in kenotic love and is instructed in the application of this love for all people. He enters eternity, he renders incorruptible the created nature and he lives the universality. The Divine Liturgy and other services, give the believer the proper impulse for the right life as embodied in the petition "for the peace of the whole world". Thus, the believer evolves into an authentic person, into a universal man. In this way man’s desire for universality is satiated and man is properly armed to face the perils of globalization.

The above-mentioned are a treasure entrusted to the Orthodox Church. Here lies the Church’s importance and monumental responsibility. The witness of Orthodoxy is not a confessional case, because it is of a catholic and universal significance. It is a witness emanating from her quality as the Catholic and Apostolic Church. Meanwhile it is the witness which has to be given, so that we can cherish hope for the future.

The truth of the Orthodox Church is testified not in the air but in the hearts of the Orthodox. It is not offered with reference to the past but through experience and activation in the present. Today, at a time when the world considers money as the measure of all things, when mankind is governed by money and deifies money, the witness of Orthodoxy must be given through the scorn of money, through the crumbling of this false god. This witness must be primarily given by Orthodox monasticism as well as by the whole body of the Church.

If the world is induced to believe that everything can be bought with money, it is necessary to see authentic forms of life, such as an Orthodox cenobitic monastery, or a traditional family, which remain free from money. Moreover, the world must be informed that with money only "the inferior and the insignificant things" can be bought, whereas "the necessary which constitutes our life" are common to all.(19) The money of the whole world, and the world itself, is nothing compared with the value of only one man, of only one human soul.(20)

1. Magazine Pemptousia 4 (Dec.2000-March 2001) p.38.

2. Matt. 28:19

3. John 4:22

4. Luke 16:9-13

5. Col. 3:5

6. St Basil, Sermon on the verse “I will pull down my barns” 7 , PG 31,276B.

7. Arch. Sophrony, We Shall See Him as He Is, Essex 1988, p. 197.

8. Philip. 2:4

9. 1 Peter 2:5, 9

10. Gen. 1:27

11. Psalm 82:6-7

12. St Gregory Palamas, "Homily on the Holy Spirit" 2 ,78 in P. Christou, Gregory Palamas: Works, vol.1, Thessaloniki 1962, p.149.

13. Galatians 1:11

14. Archim. Sophrony, On Prayer, Essex 1994(2), p.97 (Greek).

15. Isaac the Syrian, "Sermon 23". Ed. Ioannis Spetsieris, p.93.

16. "Be still and know that I am God" - Psalm 46:10

17. Sticheron of the Vespers of the 9th of September.

18. Doxastikon of the Vespers of Saturday (1st mode).

19. St John Chrysostom, "Sermon on the Statues" 2,6, PG 49,43

20. Matt. 16:26

Source: Translated by Koutloumousiou Monastery, Mount Athos.

December 10, 2013

A Christians Perpetual Battle


By Archimandrite Luka of Dajbabe (+ February 8, 2013)

I think that if a Christian tells himself that he's a contemporary Christian, he's already losing the battle. He should remember that he's a CHRISTIAN, and that he is carrying on the same battle that has been going on for two thousand years - the battle for the knowledge of God, for that which remains forever, for that which forms man and his relationship to the world, God, and other people. If he understands this, then he's on the sure path to discovering what he's striving for. Christ is the same yesterday, today, tomorrow, and unto the ages of ages, as the Apostle Paul said (cf. Heb. 13:8). I think that in contemporary life a lie is making itself known, which is brought to us by the devil: that now there is some kind of special situation, for which there are not yet any methods or rules; that now is the time of computers and modern technology, that the path of salvation is now different. I think that along with this lie that he's instilling in us, he's foisting a parallel religion on us, a religion of this world. The fact that modern technology exists now, that we dress differently, that social relationships have changed, does not separate us from the Gospel in any way. The Gospel remains as it was before, for it's outside time, and was written not only for the time when the Lord walked the earth, but for all times.

From The Orthodox Word, No. 287, 2012, pp. 302-303.

August 26, 2013

Elder Porphyrios and the Need For Asceticism


There are some who criticize Elder Porphyrios for not teaching the need for asceticism in the Christian life. The following excerpt is proof, among many others, that this criticism is far from true.

By Elder Porphyrios of Kapsokalyva

Do not feel sorry for the body. Chastise it. You cannot understand what is the fire of love? You must do sacrifice, asceticism. Spiritual and physical asceticism. Without asceticism, nothing happens. Be obedient to your spiritual program, such as your rule, the services, etc. and do not neglect them. Do not put it off for tomorrow. Do not even let sickness ruin it, unless it is a sickness unto death. When I was young I did three thousand prostrations a day and I never tired, for I was hard built. I chastised myself, despising the effort.

Let me show you how I did the prostrations. I did them flat and quick, without putting my knees to the ground. First I made the sign of the cross hitting hard my forehead with my fingers, then my knees,and then up to my shoulders symmetrically. Then I put my hands to the ground and lifted myself quickly. At that time I pressed down a little bit with my knees. Do you see how involved together is the body and soul in the worship of God? The nous and heart to Christ, and the body to Christ. Make prostrations with reverence and love and do not count them. It is better to do ten good ones instead of many without zeal, without worship and without divine eros. Do as many as you can, depending on your mood, but not pseudo-prostrations and pseudo-prayers. Do not do typical things with God. God asks that we strive for Him, and for it to be "with all our soul and all our heart."

Prostrations are also exercise. And even though we should never think of this, there is no better exercise than this for the stomach, intestines, chest, heart and spine. It is very beneficial, so why not do it? When this exercise is done with the worship of God and the soul achieves this worship, it is filled with joy, calmness and is at peace. This is everything. And of course, on the other hand, it follows that it benefits the body. Do you understand? Peace and tranquility come to the soul and the proper functioning of our organic system comes to the body, such as the circulatory, digestive, respiratory and endocrine, which have a direct relationship with our soul.

From ΓΕΡΟΝΤΟΣ ΠΟΡΦΥΡΙΟΥ ΚΑΥΣΟΚΑΛΥΒΙΤΟΥ ΒΙΟΣ ΚΑΙ ΛΟΓΟΙ (Elder Porphyrios Kavsokalyvitou: Life and Counsels). Translated by John Sanidopoulos.

July 15, 2013

A Convenient Christianity (Photios Kontoglou)


By Photios Kontoglou

We have made our own Christianity, a convenient, humane and reasonable Christianity, as the Grand Inquisitor of Dostoevsky says, because the Christianity taught by Christ is inapplicable, inhumane.

Instead of rising towards Christ, who said "If I am lifted up from the earth I will draw all people to Myself", we have brought Him down to where we are, and have made a Christianity that agrees with our weaknesses, with our passions, with our worldly ambitions, and we have given our saints qualifications that our materialistic minds appreciate and admire, making them philosophers, orators, politicians, psychologists, sociologists, educators, scientists, etc.

The Grand Inquisitor, speaking as if Christ was standing before him (he had commanded His capture, since He once again descended to the earth and people were following Him), said to Him: "At the time you came into the world you brought people a harsh religion, impractical and inhumane. We made it convenient, humane. Why did you come again into the world? Will you spoil it, just as it has taken off? Therefore, I command that you be burned in your name, as a heretic."

A convenient, a humane Christianity, this human construct, is a pitiful deformation of the Gospel by the wicked materialism of the flesh.

Source: Translated by John Sanidopoulos.
 

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