Homily on Thanksgiving

by St. Basil the Great

1. You have heard the words of the Apostle, in which he addresses the Thessalonians, prescribing rules of conduct for every kind of person. His teaching, to be sure, was directed towards particular audiences; but the benefit to be derived therefrom is relevant to every generation of mankind. Rejoice evermore, he says; Pray without ceasing. In everything give thanks (I Thessalonians 5:16-18). Now, we shall explain a little later on, as far as we are able, what it means to rejoice, what benefit we receive from it, and how it is possible to achieve unceasing prayer and give thanks to God in all things.

However, it is necessary to anticipate the objections that we encounter from our adversaries, who criticize the Apostles injunctions as unattainable. For what is the virtue, they say, in passing ones life in gladness of soul, in joy and good cheer night and day? And how is it  possible to achieve this, when we are beset by countless unexpected evils, which create unavoidable dejection in the soul, on account of which it is no more feasible for us to rejoice and be of good cheer than for one who is being roasted on a gridiron not to feel agony or for one who is being goaded not to suffer pain?

And perhaps there is someone among those who are standing among us here who is ailing with this sickness of the mind and makes excuses in sins (Psalm 140:4, Septuaginta), and who, through his own negligence in observing the commandments, attempts to transfer the blame to the law-giver for laying down things that are unattainable. How is it possible for me always to rejoice, he may ask, when I have no grounds for being joyous? For the factors that cause rejoicing are external and do not reside within us: the arrival of a friend, long-term contact with parents, finding money, honors bestowed on us by other people, restoration to health after a serious illness, and everything else that makes for a prosperous life: a house replete with goods of all kinds, an abundant table, close friends to share ones gladness, pleasant sounds and sights, the good health of our nearest and dearest, and whatever else gives them happiness in life. For it is not only the pains that befall us which cause us distress, but also those that afflict our friends and relatives. It is from all of these sources, therefore, that we must garner joy and cheerfulness of soul.

In addition to these things, when we have occasion to see the downfall of our enemies, wounds inflicted on those who plot against us, recompense for our benefactors, and, in general, if no unpleasant circumstance whatsoever that would disturb our life is either at hand or expected, only then is it possible for joy to exist in our souls. How is it, therefore, that a commandment has been given to us that cannot be accomplished by our own choice, but depends on other antecedent factors? How am I to pray without ceasing, when the needs of the body necessarily attract the attention of the soul to themselves, given that the mind cannot attend to two concerns at the same time?

2. And yet, I have been commanded to give thanks in everything. Am I to give thanks when I am strapped to a rack, tortured, stretched out on a wheel, and having my eyes gouged out? Am I to give thanks when I am beaten with humiliating blows by one who hates me? When I am stiff from the cold, perishing from hunger, tied to a tree, suddenly bereft of my children, or deprived even of my very wife? If I lose my wealth as a result of a sudden shipwreck? If I run into pirates on the sea, or brigands on the mainland? If I am wounded, slandered, wander around, or dwell in a dungeon?

Raising these objections, and more besides, our adversaries find fault with the lawgiver, thinking that, by slandering the precepts that we have been given as impossible to fulfill, they furnish themselves with a defense for their own sins. What, therefore, shall we say in response to them?

That, while the Apostle is looking elsewhere and attempting to elevate our souls from the earth to the heights and to transport us to a heavenly way of life, they, unable to attain to the loftiness of the lawgivers mind, and preoccupied with the earth and the flesh, crawl around in the passions of the body like worms in a swamp and demand that the Apostle issue precepts which are capable of being fulfilled. For his part, the Apostle summons not just anyone, but one who is as he was to rejoice always, no longer living in the flesh, but having Christ living in himself, since union with the highest good does not in any way allow sympathy for the demands of the flesh (cf. Galatians 2:20). And even if an incision is made in the flesh, the disintegration occasioned by its continued presence remains in the part of the body that suffers it, since the pain is unable to spread to the noetic part of the soul. For, if, in accordance with the Apostles precept, we have mortified our members which are upon the earth (Colossians 3:5) and we bear in the body the dying of the Lord Jesus (II Corinthians 4:10), necessarily the injury suffered by the mortified body will not reach the soul which has been freed from contact with the body. Dishonor, losses, and deaths of our nearest and dearest will not rise up to the mind, nor will they incline the sublimity of the mind to sympathy with things below. For, if those who fall into difficulties have the same attitude as the virtuous man, they will not cause annoyance to anyone, seeing that not even they themselves endure sorrowfully what befalls them; but if they live according to the flesh (Romans 8:13), not even in this way will they annoy anyone, but will be reckoned pitiable, not so much because of their circumstances, as because they do not choose to react properly.

In short, a soul which has once and for all been held fast by the desire for its Creator and is accustomed to delighting in the beauties of the heavenly realm will not alter its great joy and cheerfulness under the influence of carnal feelings, which are varying and unstable; but things which distress other people it will regard as increasing its own gladness. Such was the Apostle, who took pleasure in infirmities, in afflictions, in persecutions, and in necessities, counting his needs an occasion for glorying (II Corinthians 12:9-10); in hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness, in persecutions and distresses (II Corinthians 12:10; 11:27), conditions in which others endure only with difficulty, bidding farewell to life: in these he rejoiced. Therefore, those who are ignorant of what the Apostle has in mind, and do not understand that he is calling us to the evangelical way of life, dare to accuse St. Paul of laying down things that are impossible for us. Well then, let them learn how many legitimate occasions for rejoicing are made available to us through Gods munificence. We were brought from non-being into being; we were made in the image of the Creator (Genesis 1:27); we have the mind and reason to perfect our nature, and through them we have knowledge of God. And perceiving the beauties of nature carefully, we thereby recognize, as if through letters, God’s great providence and wisdom concerning all things. We are capable of discerning good and evil; we are taught by nature itself to choose what is beneficial and to avoid what is harmful. Having been estranged from God through sin, we have been called back to kinship with Him, being released from ignominious slavery by the blood of His Only-begotten Son. We have the hope of resurrection, the enjoyment of Angelic goods, the Kingdom of Heaven, and promised goods, which transcend the grasp of mind and reason.

3. How is it not proper to think that these things are sufficient reasons for unending joy and unceasing gladness? How is it proper to suppose that one who is a glutton, who delights in hearing flute-playing, and who lies on a soft bed and snores, is living a life worthy of joy? I would say that such people are worthy of lamentation on the part of those who are endowed with intelligence, whereas we should call blessed those who endure the present life in the hope of the age to come and who exchange present joys for eternal joys. Whether they stand amid flames, as did the three Youths in Babylon, who were united with God (Daniel 3:21), or are shut up with lions (Daniel 6:16-23), or swallowed by a whale (Jonah 2:1), we should call them blessed, and they should pass their lives in joy, not being distressed over present sufferings, but rejoicing in the hope of what is in store for us in the next life. For, in my opinion, a good athlete, once he has stripped down for the arena of piety, should valiantly endure the blows of his adversaries in hope of the glory that comes from crowns of victory. Indeed, in gymnastic contests, those who have become inured to pain in wrestling schools are not depressed at the prospect of suffering pain from blows, but advance to close quarters with their foes, disdaining momentary pains in their desire to be publicly proclaimed victors. Thus, even if some misfortune befalls a virtuous man, it will not cast a shadow over his joy. For tribulation worketh patience, and patience, experience, and experience, hope; and hope maketh not ashamed (Romans 5:3-5). Hence, in another place, Saint Paul enjoins us to be patient in tribulation and to rejoice in hope (Romans 12:12). It is hope, therefore, that makes joy to dwell within the soul of a virtuous man. But the same Apostle bids us weep with those who weep (Romans 12:15); and, writing to the Galatians, he wept over the enemies of the Cross of Christ (Philippians 3:18). And what need have I to speak of the tears of Jeremiah (Lamentations), of Ezekiel writing lamentations over the rulers of Israel, at Gods command (Ezekiel 2:9), or of many other Saints who mourned? Alas, my mother, that thou hast borne me (Jeremiah 15:10); Woe is me, for the godly man hath perished from the earth, and there is none among men that ordereth his way aright (Micah 7:2); Woe is me, for I am become as one gathering straw in the harvest (Micah 7:1).

So, in a word, scrutinize the sayings of the righteous, and when anywhere you find one of them emitting a rather doleful expression, you will be convinced that all who are of this world bemoan the misery of the life that is led therein. Woe is me, for my sojourning is prolonged (Psalm 119:5, Septuaginta). For the Apostle has a desire to depart, and to be with Christ (Philippians 1:23). He is, therefore, vexed at the prolongation of this earthly sojourn as an impediment to his joy. David, too, bequeathed to us a lamentation in song for his friend Jonathan, in which he also mourned for his enemy: I am grieved for thee, my brother Jonathan (II Kings 1:26); and: O daughters of Israel, weep for Saul (II Kings 1:24). He mourns for Saul, as one who died in sin, but for Jonathan, as one who shared his life in every respect. Why should I speak of the other examples? And yet, the Lord wept over Lazarus (St. John 11:35) and He wept over Jerusalem (St. Luke 19:41), and He calls blessed those who mourn (St. Matthew 5:4) and likewise those who weep (St. Luke 6:21).

4. But how, you say, are these things to be reconciled with the words: Rejoice always? For weeping and joy do not derive from the same source. Weeping, for example, is naturally engendered as a result of some blow, in which the involuntary impact strikes and constricts the soul, while the spirit surrounding the heart is depressed; but joy is like a leap of the soul, as it were, which rejoices at things that are under its control. Hence, the physical symptoms are different. For, in the case of those who are distressed, their bodies are sallow, livid, and cold, whereas in the case of those who feel joyous, the condition of their bodies is efflorescent and reddish, while their souls all but leap outwards, propelled by delight.

To this we will say that the Saints lamented and wept on account of their love for God. And so, ever beholding Him Whom they loved  and increasing the gladness that they themselves derived from Him, they provided for the needs of their fellow-servants, mourning for those who sinned and correcting them through their tears. Just as people who stand on the shore and feel sympathy for those who are drowning in the sea do not jettison their own security in their concern for those in peril, so also, those who are distressed at the sins of their neighbors do not efface their own gladness; on the contrary, they increase it, being vouchsafed the joy of the Lord by virtue of the tears that they shed for their brothers. This is why those who weep and those who mourn are blessed, for they themselves will be comforted and they themselves will laugh. By laughter, one means not the sound which is emitted through the cheeks when the blood boils, but the cheerfulness which is pure and unmixed with any sadness. Therefore, the Apostle allows us to weep with those who weep, because tears of this kind are like the seed and pledge of eternal joy. Ascend with me in mind, please, and behold the Angelic estate and consider whether any other condition befits them than that of rejoicing and gladness; for they are vouchsafed to stand before God and enjoy the ineffable beauty of the glory of Him Who created us. And so, it is to that life that the Apostle urges us on, bidding us always to rejoice.

5. Now, as for the fact that the Lord wept over Lazarus and the city, we have this to say: He ate and drank, not because He needed these things Himself, but so as to leave you with measures and limits by which to control the unavoidable emotions of the soul. Thus, He wept in order to correct the propensity to excessive emotion and dejection among those given to mourning and lamentation. For if there is anything that needs to be moderated by reason, it is weeping: that is, over what things, to what extent, when, and how it is proper to weep. For that the Lord’s weeping was not emotional, but didactic, is clear from this verse: Our friend Lazarus sleepeth; but I go, that I may awake him out of sleep (St. John 11:11). Who among us mourns for a sleeping friend, whom he expects to awake after a short while? Lazarus, come forth (St. John 11:43). And the dead man was brought back to life; he who was bound walked. This is a miracle within a miracle: that his feet were bound with grave-clothes and yet were not prevented from moving. That which strengthened him was greater than that which impeded him.

Why, therefore, did the Lord, Who was about to accomplish such things, judge the incident worthy of tears? Is it not clear that, disregarding our infirmity in every way, He contained the necessary emotions within certain measures and limits, avoiding a lack of sympathy, on the one hand, as something appropriate to wild beasts, and, on the other hand, refusing to give way to excessive grief and lamentation as something ignoble? Hence, in weeping over His friend, He both displayed that He Himself shared in our human nature, and freed us from either kind of extreme, allowing us neither to indulge our emotions nor to be unfeeling in the face of sorrows.

Therefore, just as the Lord accepted hunger, after digesting solid food, submitted to thirst, after the moisture in His body was consumed, and felt weary, when His muscles and nerves were strained from travel-ling—although it was not that His Divinity succumbed to weariness, but that His body accepted its natural attributes; so also, He accepted weeping, permitting a natural property of the flesh to supervene. This occurs when the hollow parts of the brain, filled with vapors arising from grief, discharge the burden of moisture through the opening of the eyes as through some kind of duct. Hence, one experiences a certain ringing in the ears, dizziness, and darkening of the eyes when he hears about unexpected sorrows, and ones head is set in a whirl by vapors which are emitted by compressed heat deep inside him. Then, in my opinion, just as a cloud dissolves into raindrops, so also the thickness of vapors dissolves into tears. Hence, those who grieve feel a certain pleasure when they lament, because the burden that weighs on them is secretly evacuated through weeping. Experience of events proves the truth of this account. For we know many people who, in desperate straits, forcibly restrain themselves from weeping; then, in some cases, they fall into incurable sufferings, either apoplexy or paralysis, while in other cases, they completely faint, their strength having been broken down, like a weak support, by the weight of sorrow. For, what is observable in the case of fire, that it is stifled by its own smoke if it does not escape, but rolls around it—this, it is said, occurs also in the case of the faculty that governs a living creature; that is, it wastes away and is extinguished if there is no way for it to ex-hale.

6. Therefore, let those who are given to mourning not adduce the Lords tears in support of their own weakness. For, just as the food which the Lord ate is not an occasion of pleasure for us, but, on the contrary, the highest criterion of restraint and sufficiency, so also, His weeping is not an ordinance prescribing lamentation, but is a most fitting measure and an exact standard whereby we may, with proper dignity and decorum, endure sorrows while remaining within the limits of our nature. Thus, neither women nor men are permitted to indulge in mourning and excessive weeping, but only to the extent that it is fitting to grieve over sorrows; they are permitted to shed a few tears, but this must be done calmly, without bellowing or wailing, without rending ones tunic or sprinkling oneself with dust, or committing any of the other improprieties that are typical of those who are ignorant of heavenly things. For one who has been purified by Divine doctrine must be fenced around by right reason, as by a strong wall, and must manfully and strenuously ward off the onslaughts of such emotions; he must not accept any crowd of emotions that flows in, as it were, to some low-lying place, with a submissive and compliant soul.

It is the mark of a craven soul, and one that is lacking in the vigor that comes from hope in God, that it utterly collapses and succumbs to adversities. For, just as worms are particularly inclined to breed on more tender pieces of wood, so also sorrows grow in men of lesser moral fiber. Was not Job adamantine in heart? Were his inward parts not made of stone? His ten children fell dead in one brief moment of time, overwhelmed by a calamity in the house of their gladness at a time of enjoyment, when the Devil brought down their dwelling upon them. He saw the table drenched with blood; he saw his children, who had been born at different times, but who had ended their lives together. He did not wail aloud; he did not pluck his hair out; he did not let out a degenerate cry; but he uttered that thanksgiving which is renowned and acclaimed by all: the Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away; as it seemed good to the Lord, so hath it come to pass; blessed be the name of the Lord (Job 1:21). Was this man not lacking in sympathy? How could this be so? For about himself, at any rate, he says: I wept over every man who was afflicted (Job 30:25). But was he not lying when he said this? But here, too, the truth bears witness to him that, in addition to his other virtues, he was also truthful: …That man was blameless, righteous, godly, and truthful (Job 1:1).

Yet many of you keep on wailing in dirges that are designed to express dejection, and you deliberately waste away your soul with mournful melodies; and, just like the make-believe and paraphernalia with which they adorn theatres to typify tragedies, so, also, you suppose that the proper outfit for a mourner consists of black clothing, squalid hair, dirt, and dust, complete with a darkened house and lugubrious chanting, which preserves the wound of grief ever fresh in the soul. Let those who have no hope do these things. You, however, have been taught, concerning those who repose in Christ, that it [the body] is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption; it is sown in dishonor; it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power; it is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body (I Corinthians 15:42-44). Why, then, do you weep for one who has gone to change his vesture? Neither mourn for yourself, as one who has been deprived of a helper in this life; for it is better to trust in the Lord than to trust in man (Psalm 117:8-9, Septuaginta). Nor lament for this helper, as one who has suffered a terrible calamity. For, a little later, the trumpet sounding from Heaven will awaken him, and you will see him standing before the judgment-seat of Christ. So, dismiss these dejected and ignorant cries: Alas, these unexpected woes! Who would have thought that this would happen? Could I have ever anticipated that I would cover this dearest friend of mine with earth? If we should hear someone else saying such things, it behooves us to blush, since we have been taught from both past memories and present experience that these natural occurrences are inevitable.

7. Therefore, neither untimely deaths nor other misfortunes that unexpectedly befall us will ever cause consternation in us who have been educated by the doctrine of piety. For example, let us say that I had a son who was a young man—the sole heir of my estate, the comfort of my old age, the adornment of his family, the flower of his peers, the support of his household, and at that time of life which is most charming—, this lad having been carried off by death, he becoming earth and dust who, a short while ago, uttered sweet sounds and was a most pleasing sight in the eyes of his father. What, then, am I to do? Shall I rend my clothing? Shall I consent to roll around on the ground, scream in vexation, and act in front of those present like a child crying out in pain and having convulsions? Rather, paying heed to the inevitability of events, that the law of death is inexorable and affects every age-group alike, dissolving all compound things in order, surely I should not be surprised at what has happened. Surely I should not be upset in my mind, as if I had been devastated by some unexpected blow, since I have been taught beforehand that, being mortal, I had a mortal son, that there is no constancy in human affairs, and that nothing wholly abides for those who possess it.

Why, even great cities, which were renowned for the elegance of their buildings and the abilities of their inhabitants, and conspicuous for their prosperity both in the countryside and in the marketplace, now display tokens of their erstwhile dignity only in ruins. A ship which has frequently been preserved from the sea, and which has made countless speedy voyages and conveyed innumerable amounts of merchandise for traders, vanishes with a single gust of wind. Armies which have many times defeated their foes in battle have, on suffering a reversal of fortune, become a pitiful sight and one pitiful to relate. Entire nations and islands, which have attained great power, and have raised many trophies both by land and by sea, and have gathered much wealth from booty, have either been consumed by the passage of time or been taken captive and exchanged their liberty for enslavement. Indeed, in short, whatever great and unbearable evil you care to mention, life already has prior examples of it.

Therefore, just as we determine weights by a turn of the scale and assay gold by rubbing it with a touchstone, so also, if we were to remember the limits revealed to us by the Lord, we would never exceed the bounds of prudence. Whenever, therefore, any involuntary adversity befalls you, by virtue of being mentally prepared, you will avoid confusion, and you will make light of present afflictions by your hope for the future. For, just as those whose eyes are weak divert their gaze from things that are excessively bright and give them rest by looking at flowers and grass, so, also, the soul must not constantly behold that which causes grief or be fixated on present sorrows, but must direct its gaze towards what is truly good. In this way will it be feasible for you always to rejoice, if your life always looks towards God and if hope of recompense alleviates lifes dolors.

Have you been dishonored? Then have regard for the glory which is laid up in Heaven through patient endurance. Have you suffered a loss? Then contemplate the heavenly wealth and treasure which you have laid up for yourself through your good deeds. Have you been expelled from your homeland? Then you have Jerusalem as your heavenly homeland. Have you lost a child? Then you have Angels, with whom you will dance around the Throne of God, rejoicing eternally. By thus opposing anticipated good things to present sorrows, you will keep your soul in the cheerfulness and tranquillity to which the Apostles precept summons us. Neither let the joys of human affairs create immoderate and excessive gladness in your soul, nor let sorrows diminish its exultation and sublimity by feelings of dejection and abasement. Unless you have previously trained yourself in this way regarding the eventualities of life, you will never have a calm and tranquil life. But you will easily achieve this if you have dwelling within you the commandment which advises you always to rejoice, dismissing the vexations of the flesh and gathering that which gladdens the soul, transcending the sensation of present realities and extending your mind to the hope of eternal realities, the mere thought of which is sufficient to fill the soul with rejoicing and to make Angelic exultation reside in our hearts; in Christ Jesus our Lord, to Whom be the glory and the dominion, unto the ages. Amen.

Translated  from the Greek original by Hieromonk Patapios. The Greek text of this homily is found in the Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXI, cols. 217B-237A. From Orthodox Tradition, Vol XVII, No. 4 (2000), pp. 22-29.

Posted in Wisdom from the Saints

The Orthodox approach to Mission; Transforming the Heart of the World

Remarks Given at the XII All-Diaspora Youth Conference by Hieromonk Irinei

Paris, 5th July 2011

Your Eminence, Your Grace, Reverend Fathers, Beloved Brothers and Sisters:

In the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit: Amen.

It is a joy for me to be giving what amounts to the first ‘formal’ lecture of this blessed conference, in which our whole aim is to explore mission and missionary work, especially in practical terms which you as the youth of our Church—spread out as she is to every corner of the world—might take up and live out when you return home.

Given the timing of this talk here at the beginning of your reflections, I thought it best to take advantage of its position and to ask a few fundamental questions. I do this not only because it is good, as a general practice, to ask what we do and why we do it, before we engage in any activity that we hope will bear fruit; but also because the theme of missionary work, broadly speaking, is one that is very often marred by a drive for action that ‘skips over’ this very need to ask fundamental questions.

Driven by the desire to do something, anything, missionary work is too often based purely on a vision of action. And yet, as Orthodox Christians all our actions are to be grounded in truth—the Truth that is Christ Himself; and without a knowledge of this truth, our actions are shallow, and the fruit they bear is scant and small.

So if we are to seek ‘practical’ guidance on Orthodox mission, and if we are to seek it in a genuinely Orthodox manner, we must start by recognising that it is not authentic to the ‘practicality’ of Orthodoxy simply to ‘go out and do something’. An Orthodox approach begins with a heart turning to God, seeking understanding.

And so we must ask ourselves the most basic question of all, as it relates to our conference here: just what, precisely, is ‘mission’ in the mind of the Orthodox Church?

What is ‘mission’ in the mind of the Orthodox Church?

Before we attempt to focus ourselves too precisely on how to exercise it, how to accomplish it, we must took at the very concept itself. What is our ‘mission’ as Orthodox Christians? And what does it mean to be a ‘missionary’ in our contemporary world?

Often, when we hear these terms we instinctively, automatically, begin to think in the framework provided for us by outside influences. There are many religions that engage in what they call ‘missionary work’, and they are often quite visible in this; and so our understanding of what it means to be missionary, and what mission itself might mean, is regularly influenced by what we see and hear in these others. And in their examples, ‘mission’ often means ‘telling other people what we believe’, and ‘trying to get them to believe as we do’. In effect, the idea of ‘mission’ is combined with another, that of proselytism, which is the technical term for the work of drawing other people into one’s own religion or belief system.

But is this what we mean, as Orthodox Christians? Can it be that our ‘mission’ is, as such examples would suggest, to create more Orthodox Christians—to cause more people to convert?

As tempting as such a vision might be, the true testimony of the Church is that the answer must be ‘no’. Creating converts is not our mission, and it cannot be our aim as missionaries in the modern world. But what, then, is?

For this, we must not look toward our contemporary society, with its norms and expectations—even in religious terms. Our mission must not be defined by what the world expects; it must be defined by what the world needs, and what God offers to it in that need.

Our source for understanding mission, then, is not in popular ‘action plans’ or Christian marketing strategies, however pious they might be. Our source is in our past, in our heritage—which is vibrant and alive in our present. Our source is in our Fathers, who convey to us the truth of ourselves, of the world, of God and of His Church. It is by looking to what we receive from our Fathers in the faith, that we will learn what is our true mission as Christians, and in what our true missionary work might consist.

And so we must ask ourselves, what do these divine sources tell us?

The Mission of the Orthodox Christian: The Salvation of the Soul

The ‘mission’ and aim of the Christian life is the salvation of our souls and bodies, and the attainment of the Kingdom of God. This is first and foremost, and above all else.

It is for this that the Father sent His only-begotten Son, our Lord and God and Saviour Jesus Christ, into the world; it is for this that He offered Himself and sent the life-creating Spirit—that we who are fallen and broken, suffering and crippled by sin and death, might rise up by His power and attain to the life He has fashioned for us, abiding eternally with Him in His heavenly Kingdom.

We must not forget this! Yet one of the things I feel it important to remind you of today is that the work of Christian mission does often forget this, and we and you as Orthodox Christians must stalwartly resist this tendency to forget what is truly the purpose of our every Christian activity, especially our missionary work.

Our aim is not to help the people around us find a more fulfilling life; it is not to help them discover better worship; it is not to help them locate and become part of a more satisfying community. Our mission is to help them find the Kingdom of God, to overcome their sin by His power, to be transformed into the life of His blessedness.

This is our mission as Orthodox Christians; and for this reason, it is neither a popular or easy one in the world today. I want you to recognise this. To be a missionary requires struggle, and a confident boldness.

To fulfil this mission, we must proclaim boldly and without hesitation:

  • that there is but one God, not the many Gods, ideologies and spiritualities that the world likes to foster today;
  • that this one God is our God, who ‘does great and wonderful things’, and He alone is true and the Truth, and not that endless variety of truths and wisdoms the world embraces around us;
  • that there is such a thing as sin, that there is right and there is wrong, there is good and there is bad and it can and should be identified as such—even if the world might call this ‘judgemental’;
  • and, perhaps most importantly: that there is a way out of sin—namely, the Life in Christ that is the mystery of His Church.

Our mission is to attain the Kingdom of God, and to draw all those around us—even the whole world—into that same Kingdom. To be ‘missionary’, then, is to live our lives in such a manner that these two things are possible, and more than simply possible: that they actually take place.

How Are We To Do This?

I should like to spend the remainder of my short time with you this morning exploring, in practical terms, what this properly Orthodox understanding of mission might mean for each of you as the youth of the Church. And your status as the Church’s youth makes this important, for ahead of you is a whole life shaped by the Church. We are often told that ‘the future of the Church is our youth’; but this is of course quite wrong. It is the other way around. As others have said before, the future of our youth is the Church—as it is indeed the future of the whole world.

Here are the main ‘practical points’ I would like to consider together today:

(1) Developing a burning love through repentance and the mystical life.

(2) Living a distinctly different manner of life.

(3) Responding to the true needs of the world.

(1) Developing a burning love through repentance and the mystical life

At the foundation of our missionary work in the world is the missionary work that must take place in our own heart. A fundamental teaching of the Fathers is that we cannot share with others that which we do not possess ourselves; and thus it is a non-starter to believe we can share with the world the way into the Kingdom, if we are not working with all our energy to receive it in our own hearts.

The foundation of practical missionary work, then, begins in the heart—in your heart, in mine. It begins with repentance. Our hearts must see their brokenness, and turn from our sin towards redemption in Christ. Without this, we seek to share with the world what we do not have, and we seek to point the world toward a Kingdom that we are not ourselves moving toward or living within.

This can never work. If we attempt it, we are like the foolish man attempting to build his house upon the sand (cf. Matthew 7.24-27; Luke 6.46-49). As our Lord Himself told us, this house will surely fall.

But, you might ask, how is this understanding of mission beginning in the heart, a ‘practical’ step towards the missionary calling that you all share? And I answer: it is practical in as much as it defines for us a clear starting point for a life of true missionary zeal and impact.

Missionary work begins in the Holy Mysteries, in confession and the communion in the holy Body and Blood of Christ. It does not begin in a plan for travel, or an outline for catechesis, or a useful translation of the sacred writings or a manual for encounters. Nor does it begin with an idea for a good Christian bookstore or coffee-shop discussion groups. It begins with an epitrachilion laid across our head, our heart laid open by the grace of the Holy Spirit, and the sins which bind us to death and darkness defeated by the power of God. It begins when, through this sacred Mystery, we are freed of the burden of sin, and are made ready to draw near to Christ Himself in the Divine Liturgy, receiving in soul and body Him who shows us His Father’s Kingdom.

In this way the truth proclaimed by St Isaac is made clear, that ‘the Kingdom of God is within you’; and then, only then, are we able to share with the world the truth of that Kingdom. Only then can we not only say, but show the world what it means to attain this Kingdom and live a life wholly shaped by it.

This means that if you as the youth of the Church, and all of us as her members in Christ’s Body, wish indeed to attain our mission and be genuine missionaries in the world, we must begin by whole-heartedly embracing repentance—repentance not as an obligation, not as a requirement, but as a joyful and joy-creating foundation for a truly spiritual life.

We must foster in our hearts a burning love for the Life in Christ that the Church gives us. If you wish to be fruitful missionaries, begin by rushing with full zeal, eagerness and seriousness to confession, often and with full devotion. Open your heart there wholly and completely to God, holding back nothing from Him, so that no corner of your life remains divided from Him, rebellious towards Him. Run eagerly, as if it were as important as your own breath, to that Mystery by which His power might conquer your sin and draw you out of darkness towards the true Sun of Righteousness.

If this is how we make a practical beginning to our missionary calling, then we will have with us something far greater than a plan for spreading the word or offering just the right counsel. We will have hearts that burn with God’s grace. We will have within us that which was promised by our Saviour and delivered upon the Holy Pentecost which we have so recently celebrated: the Holy Spirit Himself, alive in our hearts, filling our lives and words and actions in the same way He filled the lives, words and actions of the great missionary saints of all generations past. This is the Spirit who draws all of creation to the Son, who in turn presents it to His Father. This is the Spirit who enables the journey into the Kingdom of God; and if we begin with repentance, confession, communion, then we bear in ourselves this Spirit, who in us can find a willing partner for the work of drawing all the world to the Kingdom.

We must remember one of the greatest missionary saints of the past century, St Seraphim of Sarov, and his famous saying: ‘Acquire the Spirit of peace within you, and a thousand around you shall be saved.’ We cannot assist others in finding their saving way into the Kingdom, unless our hearts so burn with the Spirit of Truth.

(2) Living a distinctly different manner of life

This second key ‘ingredient’ of a genuinely missionary life is intrinsically tied together with the first, for unless we are given life by the Spirit and freed from the bonds of sin by the Mysteries of the Church, our life will always be defined by the world. We will live the life others live, even if in this way or that we might give it our own ‘flavour’, our own twists. If we dwell first and foremost in the world, if we are shaped above all by the world, then all we can ever show the world is itself, no matter how often we might speak of God or other things.

If, however, we are given the grace through repentance to live as those ‘in the world but not of it’, then we are able, by our lives, to show the world something different. Something strikingly, unexpectedly different—but only if we are committed to living the truly ‘other’ life of the Gospel.

As an example of this, I would like to call upon an episode from the era of the Apostolic Fathers, who were the immediate successors to the Holy Apostles and who lived and wrote in what were still the first generations of the Church. At this time, the Church was, in human terms, still young and new, and few people in society yet knew of her. Those who had heard of her, rarely knew what she really was, what she actually believed; and there were no convenient ‘Introductions to Orthodoxy’ to be read—even the Creed had yet to be written. The only way to learn of the Church was to see her, to behold her, to gaze upon the Christians themselves and thus behold the Body of Christ.

And what did people see, when they looked at the life of the Church in those early days? We have an anonymous text from the time, which offers us a characterisation of what one person saw when he beheld the Christian manner of life and how he chose to characterise it to another, and it is perhaps one of the most beautiful texts ever written:

“Christians are not distinguished from the rest of mankind either in locality or in speech or in customs. For they dwell not somewhere in cities of their own, neither do they use some different language, nor practise an extraordinary kind of life. Nor again do they possess any invention discovered by any intelligence or study of ingenious men, nor are they masters of any human dogma as some are. But while they dwell in cities of Greeks and barbarians as the lot of each is cast, and follow the native customs in dress and food and the other arrangements of life, yet the constitution of their own citizenship, which they set forth, is marvellously distinct and confessedly contradicts expectation.

“They dwell in their own countries, but only as sojourners; they bear their share in all things as citizens, and they endure all hardships as strangers. Every foreign country is a fatherland to them, and every fatherland is foreign. They marry like all other men and they beget children; but they do not cast away their offspring. They have their meals in common, but not their wives. They find themselves in the flesh, and yet they live not after the flesh. Their existence is on earth, but their citizenship is in heaven. They obey the established laws, yet they surpass the laws in their own lives. They love all men, even as they are persecuted by all. They are ignored, and yet they are condemned.

“They are put to death, and yet they are endued with life. They are poor and beg their bread, yet they make many rich. They are in want of all things, and yet they abound in everything. They are dishonoured, and yet they are glorified in their dishonour. They are spoken of as evil, and yet they are vindicated. They are reviled, and they bless; they are insulted, and they show respect. Doing good, they are punished as evil-doers; then, being punished, they rejoice as if they were thereby quickened unto life. War is waged against them as aliens by the Jews, and persecution is carried out against them by the Greeks, and yet those that hate them cannot identify a reason for their hostility. In a word, what the soul is in a body, this the Christians are in the world.”1

Think of how these early Christians must have lived their lives, that one could look upon them and say such things as these! And then we must ask ourselves: am I living my life in such a manner? Will the world look at me and say such things? Or will it look at me and see someone trying to ‘fit in’, to be ‘acceptable’ to the norms and expectations of the world around me?

If we are to be genuine missionaries, we must not aim to ‘fit in’ to the world. We must live a distinctly different manner of life, so that the world might ‘look upon our good works, and glorify our Father who is in heaven’ (cf. Matthew 5.16).

(3) Responding to the true needs of the world

This brings me to my third main point: the need for us to respond to the true needs of the world. It is only when we have a heart transfigured by God’s power, when we live a truly Christian life and bear its witness in the world, that we can then see what the world truly needs—and not simply what it thinks it needs, or what it wants. It is precisely in seeing the difference between the true life we live as Christians, and the life of the world, that we can point at this dimension or that like wise doctors and say ‘Aha! It is that which must be cured, if my patient is to be well!’ We see this through our lives, and the way our lives interact with those of the world.

And now, now we have the right tools required to act. It is only now that we can say to ourselves, with the wisdom that comes from the experience of Christian life and the needs of the world, that this or that activity will authentically meet the need of those around us.

This need may be for instruction in living the virtues. It may be in drawing in fellow young people to Church activities—but not simply as a ‘social activity’, but in direct response to the needs of these specific people.

It may be in organising activities to give to the poor or reach out to suffering communities; but not simply as a generic ‘good activity’, but as a concrete response to a need we see around us, and a means of helping such people see and behold the life of the Kingdom.

Only in such a way will we construct missionary activities that actually aim to fulfil our Orthodox mission: to draw the world around us into the Kingdom of God.

Sometimes our missionary work will be friendly, casual, even playful; at others it will be formal, even stark. Not all patients are treated in the same way, and the same medication does not work for every disease. And if we are true missionaries, then whatever our state in life, we are participants in the spiritual transformation the Church offers. We are helpers in the spiritual hospital, by which souls are saved.

The Way Forward

As we then move forward with our conference, with our discussions, workshops, seminars and discussions, let us strive to remember in every context the fundamental realities that must guide us as Orthodox Christians seeking to be missionaries in the modern world.

(1) We must begin always in our own heart, seeking a burning love through repentance and the mystical life.

(2) We must always seek to live truly Orthodox lives, bearing witness to the world of a distinctly different manner of life.

(3) Then, in this wonderful life, we must turn to our fellow man, to the whole of God’s world, and seek to respond to its needs, that it may join us in this God-given life of grace and transformation.

The world does not need more generic missionaries. It does not need simply ‘Christian-flavoured’ social work. It does not need it, and it will reject it.

But the world desperately needs to be shown the way into the Kingdom of Heaven. And each of us, each of you, may receive the power from God to help the suffering world, to join Christ in offering Himself ‘for the life of the world’, and thus become true missionaries and lights to your fellow man.

May the Lord bless you in this work!

Amen.

Hieromonk Irenei Steenberg is the founder of Monachos.net, the world’s premier site on the Church Fathers, monasticism, spirituality, and Church history and theology. He can also be heard on Ancient Faith Radio on his podcast ‘A Word From the Holy Fathers’. Hieromonk Irenei is one of Orthodoxy’s most gifted thinkers, writers and public speakers.

Posted in Orthodox Christianity, Written Homilies

A Defense of Christian Faith Against Disbelief

Adapted from The Spiritual World by Protopresbyter Grigori Dyanchenko, (originally published in 1900, updated in 2012.)

Our times can in all truth be called the times of disbelief: from all directions all sorts of teachings inimical to Christian religion come to us, and in our midst too there unceasingly come about all manner of fantastic ideas contrary to the spirit of the Christian faith. These ideas are usually born among the so-called educated. Contemporary disbelief utilizes for its own ends the liberty that it finds throughout the civilized world. Apparently, disbelief is preparing to engage faith in a decisive battle. Disbelief uses all its efforts and rejects no means in order to uproot faith from the hearts of men.

The press proves to be a suitable tool for this purpose in the hands of unbelievers. No misconceptions of human reason are too monstrous to be released by it. How much blasphemy, how much mockery of all sorts, how many words of ridicule, both crass and subtle, are directed against the holiest and most heartfelt feelings of the faithful! These attacks against out faith, both obvious and concealed, can be found in almost all kinds of contemporary secular literature: in novels and stories, in works historical, scientific, and philosophical. They cam be seen in the movies, on television, in our pop music of the day. “Down with faith; there is no God!” – such is the slogan displayed on the military standards of the armies of faithless fanatics who with feverish zeal devote themselves, as they say, to the cause of education and good of mankind. “Abortion is a woman’s choice!”, political correctness, the embracing of same sex relations, these are all the mantras of the new armies of  the attackers of our faith. In reality, it would have been better if they had expended their zeal on some cause other than their ostensible one. Education, teaching of moral values and the like to name just a couple.

The spirit of falsehood has captured contemporary scientists and politicians at the moment when they begin to trust nothing but man’s reason, began to deify it and to trust the sinful freedom of man’s will. They begin to understand free will in terms of liberty to do any kind of evil: liberty not to know and not to honor God, liberty not to obey God’s laws, liberty for any kind of protest, liberty to give vent to one’s passions, liberty not to accept Christian teachings. All the intellectuals subscribe to such views and corrupt the simple, less well educated people. The control the media and the arts and further their message painting as backward and outdated, ridiculing any who would disagree with their views.

Learned professors and teachers in their pride have directed the natural sciences not toward the praise of God but toward the mockery of His holy name. They have found out that the earth is one of the smallest of the planets and have consequently concluded that mankind could not have been worthy of the Creator’s attention, and that He did not descend on earth, live there, suffer and die for mankind. They even teach their students that such Christian beliefs are fantasies, all the while forbidding the teaching of religion in our public schools.  They do not believe in God’s goodness and in His truth, most marvelous, joyful, and life-giving. They perish because of their disbelief and the wickedness of all kinds that result from it. They split the atom, but deny the existence of He who created all matter.

How many Christians are there who say:” I believe  in God”, but do not reveal their belief in their actions or their views on issues such as abortion, same sex marriage, and the human condition in general.! How many lips remain closed when it becomes necessary publicly to defend the glory of God and of His saints, whom the sons of this world blaspheme! We keep silent whenever there is an opportunity to talk about God or to put a stop to some kind of unruliness or some presumptuous remark for fear of being branded intolerant or not with the times.

Considering that the struggle of disbelief against faith has reached in our times its greatest intensity, we may regard the warning of the great apostle Paul to be written directly to us: “Be not carried about with divers and strange doctrines. For it is a good thing that the heart be established with grace; not with meats, which have not profited them that have been occupied therein” (Heb. 13:9).

It is no longer surprising to observe in contemporary society a cold, indifferent, even contemptuous attitude toward everything the reminds us of religion. One need look no further than the scandals of the past few decades involving the clergy to question and be contemptuous. Questions of a higher order, namely those dealing with morality, and answers given to them by our contemporaries, frequently reveal an unclear, confused grasp of even the most elementary rudiments of the Christian outlook. “We must be tolerant of all faiths”, “We must not condemn them as they were born with this attraction”, “It is a woman’s choice what happens in her womb”, all these opinions can be espoused by those who are supposed to be upholding the values of the Bible, small wonder people are confused. The basic commandments of the Gospel become subverted and interpreted in a way grossly inconsistent with Christian doctrine. The highest demands of Christian morality are rejected as Utopian, a dream never to be fulfilled and inapplicable to life. A whole series of concepts whose content should wake  men to moral energy and transform their spiritual selves, are re-interpreted in a way which does not at all suit these concepts and seems to derive from them some basic meaning or other.

At the same time we are revealed a broad realm of new phenomena of extreme importance. A whole new way of life is being developed, foreign to any direct influence of religion, yet universally acknowledged to be natural and reasonable. One need only think of the experiments with stem cells, a political euphemism for fetal material, to make one wonder where will science draw the line. Its supporters categorically assert that the religion of Jesus Christ has had its day, has said all it had to say.  They declare that the moral of the Gospel was useful only for the simple fishermen of Galilee, while the contemporary educated man needs different guidelines. These guidelines, they say, can be given him only by science. Science, they say, is a lighthouse before the brightness of which the light of religion grows dim and must go out completely.

Yet look with an unprejudiced eye at the religion of the New Testament during the last twenty centuries. You will be surprised to see how much it has done for mankind. What an ineradicable trace has it left upon our civilization, our customs, manners, laws, sciences, arts! How much has it changed mankind for the better! It has ennobled man and put into his life much warmth and love. Millions have derived from it strength to live in the name of goodness and truth, have put on its altar their best feelings and thoughts and found in its service their greatest joy.

Can this faith now have lost its life-giving strength? Can the spring which used to satisfy the spiritual thirst for hundreds of generations have suddenly gone dry? Can an encyclopedia of knowledge take the place of the Gospel? Does science have the strength to replace religion as the guide of man into the bright distance of the future? This is a serious question, impossible to be solved lightly. A mistake can lead to a catastrophe.

The history of Christianity is over two thousand years long. We can embrace and measure the internal, constant process of its development, as well as the degree of its mighty influence upon the conscience and the life of mankind. We should be able to see that Christianity is as yet far from having expressed the entire content of its thought. It is far from having said all it has to say.

In order to make the Kingdom of God on earth a reality, mankind must still continue for a long time to work diligently at improving the moral condition of its heart. To see the sufferings and needs of its fellow man around the globe and to move to alleviate those sufferings, not to condemn them as somehow deserving or less worthy of the blessings of God. The Gospel has awakened many good feelings in man. It has touched in man’s heart such strings as he had theretofore not known, has evoked from them sounds of magical beauty and irresistible power. Yet those sounds have not yet united in a might y chord, a hymn of triumphant love and truth.

If science wants to replace religion, it must take upon itself the responsibilities of religion. If it wants to be preferred to religion, it must give man more mighty means and a quicker path than does religion to the realization of the ultimate ends in his life,

The realm of science is vast; if you wish to say so, it is endless.  Science has split the atom, placed men on the moon, discovered the intricate beauties and complexities of our universe, but it has yet to resolve some basic fundamental. Its problems are great. It has achieved much for mankind, and will achieve even more, with the grace of God. Its very name must be holy for anyone who thinks about it. Still, intelligence is not the only force behind moral progress, and education alone does not make us better human beings. Science broadens our intellectual horizons, increases our power over nature, but it is unable without the cooperation of religion to make man spiritually reborn and to elevate him morally.

It is not for science to renew men’s hearts and to lead them toward the realization of the Kingdom of God on earth.

Science can improve the future of mankind in its own way, but this is not a complete improvement. Science explains the laws of  the universe, reveals how we can use the forces contained in matter, and thus gives us enormous power over nature. There was a time when man trembled before every tremendous natural phenomenon, but now he is master of nature.

Science has converted the sun into a printing machine, has saddled the wave, enchained the free wind, yoked steam to the work, has made lightning do the postman’s work, split the atom, and enabled instant global communications. Diamond and laser drills go through the deep heart of rock and get water in the midst of the hot desert. Desalinization plants turn the sea into potable drinking water. Hydraulic presses with no efforts compress masses of metal. The telegraph, telephone, radio, television, microwave, cell phone, telescope have all abolished distance. Spectral analysis has determined the composition of planets. Probes have travelled to distant planets and back. Millions of factories with a minimal application of muscular strength or with robotics accomplish work impossible even for the giants of mythology.

If in antiquity men were able to look into the future and see what science has accomplished by now, they would have decided that ours is the Golden Age, about which the poets always dreamed. Yet despite all the victories of man’s intelligence, the Promised Land continues to elude us like a mirage. In many places there still is deep ignorance, over-work, and abysmal poverty side by side with idleness and luxury.

In spite of its promise to create by its own powers a kingdom of highest truth and equality on earth, science has shown itself powerless in this respect. The nuclear age has as many vices as the ages of greatest barbarity. Instead of uniting under the guidance of God and then struggling against the universal enemy –darkness and injustice-men struggle under the banners of science for nothing except gain. The basic slogan  of everyone’s life is “Might is right.” Man is like Ishmael, about whom the Bible says: “His hand will be against every man, and every man’s hand against him”(Gen. 16:12). Everyone struggles and toils on his own behalf and for his own sake only. There thus is universal enmity, universal distrust, irritability, anger. Nowhere can we find restfulness, justice, mercy, love.

Science declares that the severe, merciless law of the struggle for survival moves the world and rules it.

“Be firm,” say philosophers like Nietzsche. “Give no way to mercy, sympathy, love. Oppress the weak, climb higher on their corpses. You are children of a higher race. Your ideal is the superman.”

A horrible theory! According to it, not the best, but the strongest and greediest triumph. Goodness, love, and truth must step aside and give way to violence, shamelessness, and vice. Those who have behaved like the Nietzschean ideal are Dionysius the tyrant of Syracuse, Herod the Great, Nero, Cesare Borgia, Lenin, Hitler, Stalin, Pol Pot, Hussein, and Qaddafi.

Where, then, is happiness of all the members of the family of man, a happiness promised by science? Where is the triumph of the highest love and truth? Why does not science, along with material progress, bring an improvement of morals? Why does it not remove evil, root and all? Alas, to do so is not the provenance of science. The origin of evil is a moral kind, and science can do nothing against moral evil. It can break a rock, split an atom, send men to the moon, but cannot make mild a cruel, hard heart.

Twenty centuries ago the Gospel proclaimed that the heart is the origin of all thoughts, both evil and good. The divine Knower of heart, Christ the Saviour, first showed that man’s spirit is the only source of social, political, and every other kind of life, and that the more perfect man will become, the more perfect will be all that he creates. If you wish to change life and the world surrounding you, says Christianity, change yourself first and change your heart. It is possible for a brotherly life filled with love, in short, for the Kingdom of God, to exist on earth, but we must look for them not somewhere in our surroundings, not in something external, but inside ourselves, in our hearts. And our hearts cannot be influenced by science but are influenced by religion.

The Gospel tells us about God as the perfect Love and absolute Truth, about His attitude to the world and our duties toward Him. It fills our souls with reverent adoration of the Highest Being, wakens in us a desire to become worthy of His love, evokes in us subjection to His commandments as expressing incontrovertible moral law. Christianity alone, in the name of Supreme Holiness, which is God Himself, ceaselessly motivates man to go on growing morally.

The highest universal ideal of the whole mankind is revealed in the Gospel. This ideal s the Kingdom of God. The way to the Kingdom of God is a moral rebirth of man’s whole spiritual nature, a development in him of a Christian outlook, and a formation of his will in the spirit of the New Testament love and truth. The moving force in this development is religion. Science can in no way find this pre-eminence of religion humiliating for itself and can have no reason to quarrel with it. Science has its own sphere of activity, honorable as far as it goes, and its every success is usually a great benefit for mankind, accomplished through the grace of God.

The realm of religion and the realm of science do not contradict each other at all, once we understand the differences between them. On the contrary, they  complement each other. If there are conflicts between the representatives of religion and the representatives of science, such conflicts are due to unfortunate misunderstandings, incapacity to deal with something outside one’s competence, and desire to judge a realm of activity foreign to one’s own.

Science determines eternal, unshaken laws in accordance with which the whole universe lives. It reveals and subjects to man’s reason more and more powers of nature, thus establishing the degree of man’s external, physical dependence on the surrounding world. In brief, science searches for the best answers it can find to the question: How does the world operate? Religion has a different problem. It answers the question: How ought a man to live in the world? What should be man’s relation to the world and to Him Who is above the world?

All of mankind has not yet completed its search for that eternal meaning of life. Therefore it is strange to say that religion has played out its part, and that science alone must be the guiding star and the moving force of future civilizations.

During the twenty centuries of its existence, Christian religion has made a strong and indelible impression upon a long series of generations, their laws and institutions, their intellectual and moral upbringing. No matter what are our own religious views, we all are, every minute of our lives, consciously or unconsciously, under the influence of Christianity.

A considerable number of ideas first announced to the world by Christianity have now become common property. Although the opponents of Christianity will not acknowledge it, they owe to the Gospel almost everything of which they are proud. However, let clouds conceal the sun! Daylight surrounding us is independent from its origin, even when that origin is hidden. Once the clouds are dispersed, the sky grows bright and shines in all its beauty, and the sun pours forth streams of warmth and light. The day becomes bright and glorious.

When will such a day come? No one can answer this question.  Jesus Christ has said that we cannot know this. But although we  cannot know the time when He will come, we must always be ready to meet Him. We must be watchful like the master of a house. We must be prepared like the virgins whose lamps are ready for the coming of the bridegroom. We must work  with all our strength toward the coming of that hour, as worked the recipients of the talents in the parable.

It is not within our power to save mankind and to change the nature of the world. But it is within our power to correct our own spiritual nature, to perfect our character, and to educate our will in a Christian way. All these actions are within our power and are, moreover, our duty, the personal obligation of each one of us.

All the enemies of divinely revealed teaching, all those who deny the existence of God, must grow silent before the arguments presented by ordinary common sense enlightened by divine revelation. The simple logic of human intelligence should be able to convince them.

If they continue in their error despite the incontrovertible proofs of theology, despite proofs taken from the Holy Scriptures, despite the history of mankind from the most ancient times, and despite the belief in a Supreme Being by even the most savage peoples of the world; if they are not convinced of the existence of God and the eternal life of the soul by the greatness, endlessness, and beauty of the material world, the harmony of the created world, and the very eternity of time and space, in which an infinite number of bodies perform their movements, all of them enormous and mysterious; if, finally, they are not convinced of the truthfulness of many of the Biblical accounts  by the archaeological excavations in ancient Assyria, Babylonia, Chaldea, Palestine, or Egypt, then they should at least on the basis of simple common sense come to the conclusion that, besides the visible world there is also an invisible one, since the chain of causation must have a Final Cause, namely God, the basic Source of all that is.

If there is in the universe the apparent, the not hidden, then there must be, contrasting with the apparent, also the mysterious, the hidden, the supernatural. If there exists the material, the seen, then there exist also the spiritual, the unseen. The former is the object of our bodily senses, the latter, by our inner, spiritual feeling, our faith.

If our bodily senses have objects of perception, then there are similar objects to be at least partially perceived by the inner senses. Thus there exists in the world a whole series of contrasting objects, phenomena, and actions, for instance, good and evil, matter and anti-matter, the infinitely small and the infinitely large, complete inertia and complete activity, light and darkness, etc.

If my self exists, then there must be others like it, and those that are higher than it (angels). If we and those higher than us exist, then there must exist One incomparably the Highest and Most Perfect of us all and of the whole world, the Beginning, the Cause, the Foundation, and the Creator of all that exists.

If there are in the universe beings progressively lower, as compared to me, and if there are, then lower, higher and ever higher beings, then above of us creatures of the earth, and above the more perfect bodiless spirits, there must be One the Highest and Most Perfect, Who has created us all and is governing us.

This most Incomparable, Eternal, Endless, All-filling, Most Perfect, Most Holy, Almighty, and All-high Being is God in Holy Trinity.

He is that greatest, incomprehensible Cause from which everything originated; that living and all-wise, eternal and almighty Power which upholds all and provides for all. The inquisitive mind of man cannot go farther. Here is the limit beyond which none of the creatures ever has stepped, nor will any ever do so.

If the world which surrounds us is inexpressibly marvelous and lovely, if it is created incredibly wisely and surprises our weak mind with its sever and majestic harmony both as a whole and in its details, in the limitless expanse and in the small things seen only under the microscope or electron microscope; if it is marvelously ruled according to great and eternal laws by an invisible, all-powerful Hand, in accordance with a wonderfully strict order and harmony, then there must exist also the most wise and great Power That has created it ands supports it even now.

Look at the sky in silent, clear, starry night. Does not the inexpressibly beautiful vault of the heavens, studded with a countless multitude of enormous worlds, speak to you about God and His wondrous greatness and wisdom? It will overwhelm you even more if you will look at it through a telescope. Will not your heart tremble at the countless sources of light: the constant stars, the planets, the comets, all of which proceed on their unchanged paths, set in accordance with eternal laws, all of them separated from us by immeasurable terrifying distances? Do we not then understand the divinely inspired words of the holy prophet and psalmist: “The heavens declare the glory of God: and the firmament sheweth His handiwork” (Ps.18:1)? And not only in the great things of the universe do we see the marvels of God’s creation-we see tem also in the immeasurably small. Look into the microscope and you will see a whole world of creatures in one drop of water. Do we not see everywhere the undoubtable wisdom of God’s creation? Can these wonders of wonders have come about of themselves, without a cause, without a Creator? Does anything in the world come about without an external cause, all by itself?

Can those who consciously deny the existence of God and the immortality of the soul be called normal, psychologically balanced people? Hardly. Otherwise, how could we explain the strange contradiction between, on the one hand, their knowledge of the Bible and their acquaintance with weighty theological proofs of God’s existence, and on the other hand, their inability and unwillingness to know the greatest and most perfect truth which has revealed to the world from the first times of creation, and then continued being revealed in many ways by the Lord of the universe Himself; and finally who clearly and undeniably attested  by the Son of God, our Saviour, Who assumed flesh and exactly fulfilled all the prophecies and witnessed to the truth of His teachings by countless signs revealed to the Christian world at various times through His divine power? Speaking of the exact fulfillment of prophecies, we may remark that at present we seem to see clearly an exact fulfillment of the scriptural revelation concerning the appearance in the world of many false prophets and false teachers, who deny the truth and teach men not to believe in God (Matt.24:11-24, I Tim. 4:1-2, II Tim. 4:3-4, etc).

The believers need no proof of the existence of God, the existence of the soul, the supernatural world, etc. All these they acknowledge with their believing heart, enlightened by the divine teachings, and with their uncorrupted reason and will.

Nothing in the world will replace for mankind the divine revelation attested by the Bible. The truthfulness of the Bible has been in many respects confirmed also by science.

Let the wise of this world understand that the truthfulness of the Bible can be perceived also from the strict simplicity and order of the Biblical narrative itself, and from the deep sincerity and conviction which fills the entire content of this holy and divine book.

The burden of proof is on them. Let them quite definitively, with scientific exactness, deny the Biblical narrative about the Creation of the world, the Flood, and other events of like nature.

How can they explain such strange and mysterious occurrences as when lightning incinerates one man so that he is on flame like a bunch of straw, while another man struck by lightning  has his hands burnt to a cinder while his gloves remain untouched? Why can lightning forge together the links of an iron chain but on another occasion can kill a hunter without discharging the gun in his hands? How can it melt the earring in a woman’s ear without doing any harm to her skin? How can it undress a man and leave him naked without harming him, but on another occasion burn only his shoes or his hat?

Let them also attempt to explain scientifically and incontrovertibly all kinds of supernatural events experienced by people in all parts of the world throughout the history of mankind. Let them explain the essence of the so-called hypnotism, somnambulism, clairvoyance, telepathy (that is , mental communication between two people at a distance).

How can they explain facts well attested but inexplicable, such as the appearance of a man’s double while that man is still alive?  What is split personality and how can it be fully explained? How will they explain the appearance to one or several people of their absent relative or friend at the moment of his death, or the appearance of the shade of someone dead long ago?

How and in what way can skeptics, who deny the supernatural world, explain the existence of houses inhabited by mysteriously invisible beings who, however, clearly reveal themselves; the motion of various objects which no one has set in motion; the raising in the air by an invisible hand of very heavy objects; the appearance of a hand in the air; the ringing of a bell or the sounds emitted by a musical instrument, or mysterious knocking due to an invisible hand?

Can the wise of this world say anything at all definite about the fourth dimension? Can they precisely interpret the concepts of space and time? Can they explain why time is shortened in dreams, and what are dreams?

In what way will they explain prophetic dreams, premonitions, and second sight? How will they explain the ability of some people to read the thoughts of others?

In addition to the questions already offered, we should like to put before the contemporary wise men some other questions, of a different kind, namely: With what do they expect to replace the faith in God and in the divinely revealed teachings of the divinely inspired faith? Will the Bible be replace by all sorts of philosophic books, systems of morality concocted by man, materialistic theories, all sorts of Utopias and inventions of human reason denying the truths of divine revelation? Having lost religion and rejected divine laws, will mankind be happier, more perfect, more upright, more humane, more honest?

With what will the replace the comfort which religion alone gives man in sorrow? If, as these false men wish, Christianity should disappear, where will people find a replacement for the fountain of divine faith, from which they have been drawing pure spiritual joys, patience in the midst of toils, obedience to fate, meekness, brotherly love, strength for their struggle against evil, hope for a better future?

Will they be able to get all this from some kind of philosophic teaching, some moralistic pamphlet, or some materialistically scientific theory? The fruits of work over a microscope in a laboratory will not substantially improve man’s life.

The mysterious facts and phenomena enumerated above have, for the most part, been acknowledged as insoluble problems by representatives of science. We have borrowed them partly from scientific journals and papers, especially from the essays of Camille Flammarion on psychic problems in the realm of the unseen, partly from the writings of Butlerov and Aksakov.

Let then, contemporary skeptics, materialists, deniers, and freethinkers reply to our questions with scientific exactness. Let them reply to us, and then we may acknowledge something solid behind their materialistically scientific theories, their liberal pamphlets full of denial their positivistic or rationalistic views and ideas.

Then we shall believe that the scientific conclusions of the materialists have been derived from a reliable source, that the limits of human reason are indeed non-existent, and that reason, intelligence, and science are the only means and the only way for cognition of the universe, its phenomena and mysteries. However, let us repeat that we shall never get such answers to our questions.

(Excerpted from the Spiritual World, Protopresbyter Grigori Dyachenko, 1900, pp348-355- In Russian, reprinted from Eternal Mysteries Beyond the Grave, Archimandrite Panteleimon, Print Shop of St. Job of Pochaev, Holy Trinity Monastery)

Posted in Orthodox Christianity, Written Homilies

A reflection by St. Ephraim of Syria

Make me whole, O Lord, and I will become whole! O only wise and merciful Physician, I beseech Thy benevolence: heal the wounds of my soul and enlighten the eyes of my mind that I may understand my place in Thine eternal design! And inasmuch as my heart and mind have been disfigured, may Thy grace repair them, for it is as true salt.

What shall I say to Thee, O Knower of the heart who searc…hest the heart and inner workings of men? Indeed, Thou knowest that, like a waterless land, my soul thirsts after Thee and my heart longs for Thee. And Thy grace has always sated those that love Thee.

Thus, as Thou has always heard me, so now do not scorn my prayer. For Thou seest that my mind, like a prisoner, seeks Thee, the Only true Savior.

Send Thy grace, that it may satisfy my hunger and quench my thirst. For insatiably do I desire Thee, O my Master! And who can have enough of Thee if he truly loves Thee and thirsts for Thy truth?

O Giver of light! Fulfill my supplications and grant me Thy gifts according to my prayer; impart to my heart just one drop of Thy grace, that the flame of Thy love may begin to burn in my heart; and, like a fire, may it consume evil thoughts like thorns and thistles!

Give me all this in abundance; grant it to me as God unto man, as the King to His subjects, and increase it as a kind Father.

- A prayer by St. Ephraim the Syrian

Posted in Prayers and Reflections, Wisdom from the Saints

The miraculous holy fire in Jerusalem

On the Eve of the Resurrection, inside the tomb of Christ in Jerusalem, the Holy Fire descends on the Patriarch of Jerusalem from within the Holy Sepulcher and believers pass the light around to all the faithful, who usually hold 33 candles bound together, to signify the 33 years of Christ’s ministry on the Earth. The fire is miraculously given but also miraculous in nature, because it does not burn, just as Moses and the Burning bush. Believers have proved this by passing their hands through the fire, and faces. It’s color is different than normal too, with more of a white-blue hue. The Holy Fire also bounces around like no light show ever manipulated by machines! Pilgrims have seen the Fire ignite unlit oil lamps on It’s own.

In 2007, USA Today wrote an article about the holy fire which can be found at http://www.usatoday.com/news/religion/2007-04-07-holyfire_N.htm

Additionally, you can find numerous videos about the holy fire by visiting YouTube.

Posted in News and Information

An Explanation of the Holy Myron

Photo by N. Manginas

Holy Myrrh is the Chrism Oil used in the Orthodox Church for the Sacrament of Confirmation. The Holy Myrrh is sanctified by the Ecumenical Patriarch with the participation of a host of Bishops and other clergy, as well as lay people. Whereas the chafing of the Holy Myrrh takes place in a building adjacent to the Patriarchal Chapel of Saint George it is stored and kept in the Sacred Repository of Holy Myrrh located in the Tower, elsewhere on the Patriarchal grounds. The Ecumenical Patriarchate distributes the Holy Myrrh to the Orthodox Churches throughout the world to be used for Confirmation, one of the Seven Sacraments. In the Orthodox Church this Sacrament of Confirmation is administered at Baptism.

Approximately every ten years the reserve of Holy Myrrh nears depletion. The Ecumenical Patriarch then informs the Holy Synod which resolves and requests for the replenishment of the Holy Myrrh during Holy Week of the forthcoming year. His All-Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch informs the Primates of Orthodox Churches throughout the world and extends to them, and other Hierarchs, an invitation to attend and participate. A request is also made to many of them asking for a specific offering of a precious oil or element mandated for inclusion in the preparation of the Holy Myrrh.

Metropolitans of the Ecumenical Throne and lay people as well, are assigned to comprise the body of those responsible for all the appropriate preparations. In the year 2012, Metropolitan Athanasios of the Senior See of Chalcedon was appointed to preside. Metropolitan Cyril of Imvros and Tenedos, Metropolitan Dimitrios of Sevasteia, Metropolitan Theoliptos of Iconium and the Grand Archimandrite Athenagoras as secretary, were the ranking clergy appointed. The lay people appointed were Stefanos Bairamoglou, George Savits, Joseph Constantinides, Christos Hamhougias, Theodore Messinas, Aris Tsokonas, Constantine Agiannides, and Catherine Malita.

Posted in News and Information

Where is your sting?

J. Basil Dannebohm

By J. Basil Dannebohm

“So they took branches of palm trees and went out to meet him crying, ‘Hosanna! Blessed is He Who comes in the name of the Lord, the King of Israel.’”

Today we celebrated Palm Sunday and our Lord’s triumphant entry into Jerusalem. Orthodox temples were adorned with palms and many of them were filled to capacity. The Church was joyful and we too declared the words we read in the Gospel, “Hosanna!”

And how quickly that will change.

I’m not a historian but I can’t recall a time in history where somebody was declared a “King” by the people and was so quickly condemned to death by the same people.

And so we find ourselves entering holy week.

This is a time when we recall the Passion and death of Our Lord God and Savior, Jesus Christ. We go from waving palms to mourning his death in a matter of days.

For forty days, we have prayed together, we have come to church for the Great Compline services, Akathist and Presanctified Liturgies.

For forty days we have fasted, preparing our bodies, minds and spirits. For forty days we have given alms and done good works.

This week we recall our sins and we take the journey to our own “Golgotha.” But at the same time we are filled with great joy. We know that at the end of the week we share in Christ’s glorious resurrection.

Yes, we will be tempted.

The evil one HATES holy week. He despises when we are in Church. He is angered when we are kind to one another. And more than likely, this week more than ever, he will do everything he can to ensure we find any possible excuse to avoid the holy services. He will work to turn us against one another, to make us speak harshly, to have disagreements with our spouses, to be angry with all that surrounds us. This week’s suffering could be the most difficult battle we have faced on our Lenten journey. FIGHT the good fight and remember that we are almost there!

Last year, just before Holy Week, I went through a lumbar puncture, better known as the spinal tap. Before the “tap,” I had two hours of MRI testing. If you are familiar with the MRI process, you’re in a tube perfectly still. There isn’t a great deal you can do in an MRI tube. Mostly, it’s a good time to do some thinking.

I started thinking about MY sinful nature and of course, the upcoming lumbar puncture. And I started to pray.

I said, “Lord, I know I have a lot of people praying for me this morning. I’m not asking you for any type of cure. Rather, I am hoping for answers. I’m also very much aware that the test I am about to experience will hurt. From what I have heard, it will sting pretty bad. But one week from now, we will recall the Crucifixion of Your Son and I know this pain does not even begin to compare to what He went through. I’m sinful, I deserve this pain, but please simply give me the courage to endure what lies ahead.”

The MRI testing was complete and the time had come and I was taken to the procedure room. The doctor’s assistant gave me the ” extreme discomfort” and “hold very still” speech and had me sign the document stating that I was ready and willing to go forward with the test.

The doctor said, “Hold very still, here comes the sting.”

And there was no sting. No pain whatsoever.

As a matter of fact, I asked the doctor if he was about to begin and he informed me that the needle was already two inches into my spine.

I tell you this story not out of pride or profess that some miracle occurred. Rather I tell you this because the experience reminded me that Christ took that sting and the sting of our sinfulness away when he was crucified on Good Friday.

Our God is a merciful God, a loving and compassionate God. I was laying there in the MRI tube thinking to myself, “Basil, accept this as your penance for all the wrong you’ve done.” And when the time had come for the sting, there was nothing. How symbolic!

The procedure reminded me of a homily we are going to hear in seven days, the Pascal sermon of St. John Chrysostom in which we hear, “O Death, where is your sting?

The sting of our sinful nature has been taken up to Golgotha. Holy week is a week of repentance and mourning but it is also a week of gratitude. Gratitude that no matter how sinful we are, all we have to do is ask God for forgiveness and that sting is taken away.

Today, we raise palms and shout, “Hosanna! Blessed is He Who comes in the name of the Lord.” And unlike those we read about in scripture who turn their back on Our Lord, we remain faithful and we continue to shout “Hosanna!”

Let others shout “Crucify Him!” His crucifixion brings us new life, forgives our sins and takes away the sting.

Avoid the temptations and evil that are thrown your way and embrace the beauty of the services we are about to pray together as a faithful Orthodox people.

I encourage you to take advantage as much as you can of  the beautiful services this week. Come to church – bring your friends and your family. Join together and PRAY!

Wave your palms today, mourn in the days we mourn and join with the Church rejoicing at the feast of feasts – just seven days away.

Peace and all good.

Posted in From the Publisher