Showing posts with label Great Lent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Lent. Show all posts

April 15, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: Conclusion (10)

 
By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

The great prayer of Ephraim the Syrian ends with an extremely important petition:

"Yes, Lord King, grant me to see my own offenses, and not to condemn my brethren, for You are blessed unto the ages of ages. Amen."


The condemnation of our brethren is our deepest universal habit. The condemnation of our neighbors is what we are always busy with, and we leave off the most important of all our deeds - the consideration of our own transgressions.

No one has such a custom: from the beginning of the day until the very night, we think about everything, do everything, but we don’t do the important thing - considering our own heart. No one does this, except for a very small number of people who have dedicated themselves to God, they have this most important, primary occupation: they look for the impurities of sin in their own hearts. When they find it, they easily and quickly get rid of it, because when they find any impurity in their hearts, they become disgusted and try their best to get rid of it. When they see sins, they will repent and be cleansed of them.

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Love (9)


By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, bestow on Your servant a spirit of love."*

We now ask for love, which is the fulfillment of the whole law. If we do not have love, then, according to the words of the holy Apostle Paul, we are like "ringing brass or a sounding cymbal" (1 Corinthians 13:1).

If we have the gift of prophecy and great knowledge, and have faith that moves mountains, but do not have love, we are nothing. If we distribute all our property to the poor and give the body to be burned, but we do not have love, we are nothing. That's what love is. If there is no love, no matter how perfect we may be, we are nothing.

April 13, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Patience (8)


 By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, bestow on Your servant a spirit of patience."

Oh, how we must ask for this spirit of patience! Oh, how we must acquire patience! After all, the Lord Himself said: “By your patience save your souls” (Luke 21:19).

In patience is the salvation of our soul. Why is it so? Because the Lord Jesus Christ said: “Strait is the gate and narrow is the way that leads to life” (Matthew 7:14). This path is difficult, daunting, and the Lord told us, and the apostles tell us that this path - the path of Christian life - is the path of suffering, the path of sorrows. “In the world you will have sorrow, but fear not, for I have overcome the world” (John 16:33).

April 11, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Humility (7)


By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, bestow on Your servant a spirit of humility."
 
Remember that the commandment of humility is the first commandment of the beatitudes, and if the first, then the most important. Have you ever heard the word of God, proclaimed by the Prophet Isaiah: “Thus says the High and Exalted One, who lives forever — His name is Holy. I live on high in heaven and in the sanctuary, with the contrite and humble in spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble and revive the hearts of the contrite” (Is. 57:15).

April 10, 2022

Third Homily for the Fourth Sunday of Great Lent (St. Luke of Simferopol)


“There is Neither Jew nor Greek” (Gal. 3:28)
 
By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

(Delivered on April 15, 1951)


In today's apostolic reading, you have heard the great and holy words of the Apostle Paul: “There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:28).

The apostle speaks of the highest form of unity, unity in Christ Jesus. We need to delve into the deep, sacred meaning of his words, we need to understand what kind of unity he is talking about, for people have very different forms of unity and oneness.

There is a terrible and evil unity and oneness between those who are looking for opportunities to rule over all peoples and exploit them in an insatiable thirst for gold. They need atomic bombs and terrible planes that bring death from the sky to peaceful people.

April 6, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Chastity (6)

 
By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, bestow on Your servant a spirit of chastity."*

Have you paid attention to the fact that even such a great ascetic and desert-dweller, such a great saint as Ephraim the Syrian, prayed that the Lord would give him the spirit of chastity. Did he, the holy elder, really need this prayer? It is not for us to judge, but he himself judged that it is necessary to pray about this, and all the saints prayed about this.

Why did they pray about this? Because they knew that the Lord required from them, as well as from all Christians, complete, unconditional chastity, chastity not only of the flesh, but also of the spirit. Even in our thoughts, we do not dare and should not violate chastity, for the Lord Himself said, “Whoever looks at a woman with lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matthew 5:28). No one can avoid unclean thoughts, and the saints struggled painfully with these thoughts for many years.

I have already told you about how the Monk Martinian, a young man, fought desperately against this passion, how, when he was seduced by a depraved woman who managed to enter into his monastic cell, he stood on the burning coals in order to overcome the carnal passion in himself.

In this way the saints fought for decades, and the main means in their struggle was fasting, humility and prayer, for all the holy fathers say that there is no greater protection from carnal lusts than humility.

A person, if he acquires humility, is freed from them, and proud people, alien to humility, are completely overwhelmed by this base passion. Remember this: humility is the first and most important way to free us from lust.

Do you know how many among us are easily, extremely easily related to the violation of the seventh commandment, how many such Christians who do not consider this sin a serious sin, who say: “After all, I am pious, I try my best to fulfill the commandments of Christ, I try to do acts of mercy, won't the Lord forgive this little weakness?"

Those who speak so are deeply mistaken, for what they call a small weakness, the apostle Paul calls it quite differently. He is so strict in this regard that in the epistle to the Ephesians he says: “But fornication and all uncleanness and covetousness should not even be named among you, as befits saints” (Eph. 5:3).

You can’t even think about them, you can’t even talk about them, as befits saints. He says that adulterers and fornicators and drunkards will not enter the Kingdom of God. The apostle directly says that those who violate this commandment - fornicators and adulterers - will not enter the Kingdom of God (1 Corinthians 6:9).

And where will they be? Of course, in a place of darkness, in a place of eternal torment. Think about it. Do not any of you say that nature itself is so arranged that this passion is natural. This is completely wrong, human nature is designed so that people give birth to children, and not to defile themselves. For the Apostle Paul says that every sin is outside the body: pride, vanity, ambition, envy, anger, since these are all passions of the soul, but fornication and adultery is in the body itself, defiles not only the spirit, but also our body.

Didn't the Apostle Paul say that our bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit, and if the temple must be clean, then our bodies must be clean, not defiled by anything. We are not to destroy the temple of the Holy Spirit, to make the members of our body members of a harlot. The apostle says with horror: “Let it not be so!” (1 Corinthians 6:15)

How many among people are those who turn carnal passion into a constant pleasure, the most impure, the basest pleasure, which makes them equal to those animals that are distinguished by special lust: roosters and baboons.

It is shameful, shameful for a man in general, and even more so for a Christian man, to equal himself with a baboon. It is a shame, a shame to forget that his body is a temple of the Holy Spirit. For the apostle Paul says in his epistle: “The will of God is your sanctification, that you abstain from fornication; so that each of you knows how to keep his vessel in holiness and honor, and not in the passion of lust, like the pagans who do not know God. For God has not called us to uncleanness, but to holiness” (1 Thessalonians 4:3-5:7).

The holy apostle said: "Those who are Christ's have crucified the flesh with its passions and lusts" (Gal. 5:24).

Do you want to be Christ's, do you want to be friends of Christ, sons of God? If you want this, then remember: you must crucify your flesh with its passions and lusts, mortify it. You need a huge, daily struggle with your flesh.

This struggle is given differently to different people, for there are blessed people who do not have great sensuality, and there are others who by nature, inherited from their parents, suffer from an unusually high sensuality and lust.

I know such an unfortunate person - one unfortunate woman, extremely pious, who inherited such exceptional lustfulness from her parents. I know how she struggles with this lust. She fights with all her might, comes to self-torture: she collects thorns, prickly thorns, and crushes them with her hands so that the thorns stick into her hands. She suffers, and yet she falls. But not only such unfortunate ones fall, but also many of us, who find it much easier to abstain.

What can we say about such a fall? Let us say that just as with every fall, so it is possible and we must rise from this fall. We fall often, we fall in many respects, and if we fall in this respect, then we must climb out of that abyss, from that abyss into which we fell, climb out with all our might, calling for the help of the Holy Spirit, like a person who has fallen into an abyss, to climb out from it.

And what do people who fall into the abyss do? They get out of it with all their might, not sparing their hands, stained with blood, scratched on sharp stones, their nails torn off, their legs wounded - trying with all their might to get out.

So those who have fallen into sin against the seventh commandment must climb out of the abyss of falling, calling for help from the One Who gave the commandment of chastity, they must pray, pray fervently. We must remember, constantly remember what the apostle says: "Do not get drunk with wine, in which there is fornication" (Eph. 5:18).

There is fornication in wine, for nothing excites our lust so much as precisely drunkenness: having drunk wine, a person becomes a plaything in the hands of a prodigal demon.

A person who eats excessively, who is always idle, who does not want to work, who lives riotously and is only busy with entertainment, dancing, going to theaters and cinema, a person who sleeps like pampered women until 11 o'clock in the morning, will certainly and inevitably be a fornicator, for he does everything so that the lust of the flesh will bind him in his fetters.

And if a person is busy with constant work, physical or mental, if there is no time to be distracted from this work, having finished his work, in the evening he will strive only for rest. He will soon be satisfied with the necessary food and go to bed; he needs nothing so much as rest, he has no time for lust, no lewdness.

So, therefore, humility, fasting, strenuous work, constant fasting, constant prayers are the means by which we can free ourselves from the power of the prodigal demon. And how infinitely many unfortunate people are there, especially among young people, who read passionate novels and stories with great interest and insatiability, which describe dirty images of depravity and lust. What a poison! If a person relishes them in a dirty novel or story, then he kindles his lust.

And we must act differently: not only not to incite lust with pornographic writings and pictures, but we must strive to dispel lust, and as soon as we notice that such images appear in our thoughts, catch it and try to grab the snake by the neck, near its head, and smash its head, for if we do not do this, then the serpent will imperceptibly crawl into your heart and poison you with fornication. And the seductive, impure images that the ancient serpent instills in your heart will easily and quickly pass into admiring these thoughts, and by admiring them it then passes into the deed itself.

We must remember what we heard recently in Psalm 136: you need to grab these Babylonian babies by their feet and smash their heads against a stone, while they are babies, before they mature, before they take possession of your heart (Ps. 136:9).

This is the task before you: the task of complete chastity, chastity not only of the flesh, but also of the spirit. But, as I said, very many take the sin of fornication lightly, do not consider it serious, and our job is to stop you, to make you think again.

What can help you with this? Those who correct themselves and receive remission of this sin at confession will be admitted to the Holy Chalice. And if any of you receives such an excommunication from Communion for a while, let him not complain, do not be upset. We must think deeply and say to ourselves: "If so, then the situation is serious; it seemed to me a small sin, but the Holy Church excommunicates me from Communion." Do not be upset, do not think that you can die without receiving Communion of the Holy Mysteries. Any prohibition of Communion is lifted in case of mortal danger.

Now you understand why Ephraim the Syrian prays to God to give him the spirit of chastity. May we, all sinners, all guilty of this sin, pray to God for salvation and turn to Saint Ephraim the Syrian for help: “Help us in this struggle: we are weak, but you are strong!” Amen.

Notes:

* The Greek version of the prayer would have the word here be translated more along the lines of "moderation" or "temperance", and not just limited to "chastity". "Chastity" replaced "moderation" in the Slavonic translation of the prayer, but the implied meaning is still there.
 
 
 

April 4, 2022

Second Homily on the Fourth Sunday of Great Lent (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

"This kind is driven out only by prayer and fasting" (Matthew 17:21).

Now the Gospel reading tells us about how Jesus Christ healed one demoniac who could not be healed by the disciples. When Jesus Christ with His disciples descended from the mountain, after His Transfiguration on it, and came to the people, then a man approached Him and, kneeling before Him, said: "Lord! Have mercy on my son; he rages in the new moon and suffers greatly, for he often throws himself first into fire, then into water. I brought him to Your disciples, but they could not heal him."

April 3, 2022

First Homily on the Fourth Sunday of Great Lent (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
 
 By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

"I believe, Lord, help my unbelief" (Mark 9:24).

One father brought to Jesus Christ his sick son, possessed by a dumb spirit. The long and difficult suffering of the demoniac, even the disciples of Christ, whom he asked, could not cast out the demon from him, therefore the poor father became confused and alarmed, and he began to ask on his behalf with timidity and with some doubt, as if afraid Jesus Christ would not help. If you can do anything, he said to Jesus Christ, have pity on us, help us. When Jesus Christ said to him: "If you can believe a little, everything is possible for him who believes," he cried out with tears: "I believe, Lord, help my unbelief." That was enough, and the Lord helped the sick person right there.

April 2, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Idle Talk (5)

 
By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, give me not a spirit of idle talk."
 
Saint Ephraim prays about this, as the holy prophet David says in his psalm: “Set a guard, O Lord, over my mouth; keep watch over the door of my lips” (Ps. 140:3).

And the Lord Jesus Christ Himself said that for every idle word we will give an answer at the Last Judgment (Matt. 12:36). Think about how serious it is, how hard it is: to give an answer for each and every single idle word.

March 29, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Lust for Power (4)


By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, give me not a spirit of lust for power."

What is the spirit of lust for power? This is the desire to excel, to rule over others, to take first place. This striving to excel destroyed the archangel - the head of all angels - and made him Satan, that cast him out of heaven. This desire to dominate ruined Korah, Dathan and Abiram, who envied the glory of Moses when he led the people of Israel through the wilderness into the land of Canaan; they wanted to overthrow him and usurp power, and the Lord punished them with a terrible execution: the earth opened up and swallowed them up with all their families.

March 28, 2022

Second Homily on the Sunday of the Veneration of the Holy Cross (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

In beginning my words to you, I made the sign of the Cross on myself. So do you, Christian listeners, do on various occasions. We are so accustomed to this custom from childhood that we rarely pay due attention to it. And therefore, let us now consider what it means that we make the sign of the Cross on ourselves, and why we do it.

From the time when Jesus Christ was crucified for us on the Cross, the Cross has become an integral part of Jesus Christ. Therefore, when we make the sign of the Cross on ourselves, we show and, as it were, say about ourselves: I am a Christian, I am Christ's, I believe in Christ, I hope and trust in Christ, I serve Christ, I follow, I adorn myself with Christ, I put on Christ. Thus, by the sign of the Cross, which we make on ourselves, anyone can know that we are Christians. The sign of the Cross is the external distinguishing mark of a Christian.

March 27, 2022

First Homily on the Sunday of the Veneration of the Holy Cross (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
 By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

"We venerate Thy Cross, O Lord, and glorify Thy holy Resurrection."

At one time, Jesus Christ, having called the people with His disciples, said to them: “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me. For whoever desires to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for My sake will find it. For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Or what will a man give in exchange for his soul? For the Son of Man will come in the glory of His Father with His angels, and then He will reward each according to his works. Assuredly, I say to you, there are some standing here who shall not taste death till they see the Son of Man coming in His kingdom” (Matthew 16:24-28).

March 26, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Despondency (3)


By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, give me not a spirit of despondency."*

What is the spirit of despondency? This is what is called discouragement. People who do not understand Christianity at all, who do not understand our spiritual life, think that the entire Christian religion is full of a spirit of despondency. Looking at the monks walking around in black clothes with downcast eyes and turning the prayer rope, they think that the whole religion is dull, like the monks. This is not so at all. This is contrary to the spirit that permeates all of Christianity, for tell me, can a person with a spirit of despondency have the spiritual strength, spiritual vigor necessary to walk along the narrow path, tirelessly struggling with demons? Of course not.

March 24, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: On Idleness (2)


By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea

"Lord and Master of my life, give me not a spirit of idleness."

This is how Saint Ephraim the Syrian begins his great prayer. Why does he begin with a request to be delivered from idleness, as if there were no more grievous vices than idleness?

Saint Ephraim speaks of idleness because he knows better than us what is more important, what is more disastrous, what vice is stronger, more dangerous, and, if we talk about idleness, he begins his prayer with a prayer not to give the spirit of idleness, which means that idleness is a very dangerous vice.

March 23, 2022

An Interpretation of the Lenten Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian: Introduction (1)


By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and All Crimea
 
Lord and Master of my life, 
give me not a spirit of idleness, 
despondency, lust for power, and idle talking.
 
Bestow on Your servant instead 
a spirit of chastity, 
humility, patience, and love.
 
Yes, Lord King, grant me to see my own offenses, 
and not to condemn my brethren, 
for You are blessed unto the ages of ages. Amen.

This is the Prayer of Saint Ephraim the Syrian, about whom I have already told you, and some of whose great works I have read. Why does the Holy Church give this prayer such an unusually prominent place in the Divine Services, why is it repeated so many times during all Lenten Divine Services? Not without a special reason - you yourself feel with your heart what the reason is - this prayer penetrates the heart like no other, you feel its special, exceptional, divine power.

March 20, 2022

A Second Triumph of Orthodoxy Over Heresy (George Mantzarides)

 

By George Mantzarides,
Professor Emeritus of the Theological School of the 
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

On the first Sunday of the Fast of Great Lent, the Church celebrates the triumph of Orthodoxy over the heresies. The specific historical event which was the basis and starting-point for this celebration was the victory of the Church against the iconoclasts. The latter proclaimed that the use of icons is anti-Christian. They would not accept the veneration of the icon of Christ, nor the honor paid to the other icons or to the relics of saints. This attitude of theirs was not superficial, but came from a more profound denial of the depiction of Christ, which, in the end, led to a denial of his incarnation and his presence in the world as a real human being. The way the conflict over the icons ended shows its heretical nature. It really was a true heresy.

Homily on the Second Sunday of Great Lent (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
 By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

"And He preached a word unto them" (Mark 2:2).

At one time Jesus Christ came to Capernaum. When it was heard in the city that He was in a house, many immediately gathered, so that there was no room outside the doors. "And He preached a word unto them." They came to Him with a paralytic, who was carried by four men. And not being able to reach Him due to a multitude of people, they opened the roof of the house where He was, and breaking through, lowered the bed on which the paralytic lay. Jesus, seeing their faith, says to the paralytic: "Child, your sins are forgiven you." Some of the scribes thought in their hearts, "Why does He blaspheme so? Who can forgive sins except God alone?" Jesus, immediately realizing in His spirit that they were think this way in themselves, said to them, "Why do you think this way in your hearts? What is easier? Should I say to the paralytic: your sins are forgiven? Or say get up, take your bed and go? And so that you may know that the Son of Man has the power to forgive sins on earth (he speaks to the paralytic), I say to you: get up, take your bed and go to your house." He immediately got up, took the bed and went out in front of everyone, so that everyone was amazed and praised God, saying: "We have never seen anything like this" (Mark 2:1-12).

March 14, 2022

Concerning Icons in the Orthodox Church (Demetrios Panagopoulos)


By Demetrios Panagopoulos, Preacher
 
(Sermon Delivered on the Sunday of Orthodoxy 
in March of 1969)
 
The Icon is an expression of the divine economy, which is summarized in the teaching of the Orthodox Church which says: "God became man, that man may become God."

The Church attached so much importance to the Icon that she proclaimed and still proclaims that the victory over the Iconoclasts was a triumph of Orthodoxy, which we celebrate during the first week of Great Lent.

Furthermore, for the Orthodox Church, the Icon is a language through which it expresses its doctrines and commandments so well, just like it does with words. It is a theology that is expressed in shapes and colors that the eye sees. In other words, it is like a mirror that reflects the spiritual life of the Church, and in which one can judge the dogmatic struggles of every age.

March 13, 2022

Homily on the Sunday of the Triumph of Orthodoxy (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)


By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

Let us give thanks to God that, although we are disobedient, by His goodness we are not yet such as the Church is now anathematizing. Let us deepen our obedience to our Church! Let us not be tempted by various slanders against her, which we so often hear about! This is not news: there have been such slanders before, and always will be, and our Church has not done anything and will not do anything. No darkness will darken the purity of her teaching, the firmness of her commandments and the powers of hell will not shake her. It has Jesus Christ as its cornerstone - God's power and God's wisdom, it was founded by the inspired apostles, approved by the Ecumenical Synods, proven by the holy fathers, tested for thousands of years.

March 12, 2022

Homily Before Holy Communion on the First Sunday of Great Lent (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

Before you come, listeners, to Holy Communion, let's talk about what benefit we get when we partake of the Body and Blood of Christ, and with what feelings we should approach this Awesome Mystery.

What benefit do we get when we partake of the Body and Blood of Christ? We are most closely united with Jesus Christ, so that Jesus Christ then begins to abide in us, and we in Him: "He who eats My Flesh and drinks My Blood abides in Me, and I in him" (John 6:56), says Jesus Christ. What exactly is happening in us then? It is impossible to explain and realize this, it is impossible, one can only feel it a little, and even then not completely.

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