Sunday, March 22, 2026

Lenten Meditation -- Fourth Sunday of Great Lent, St. John Climacus

 

Source: legacyicons.com

He who has lost sensibility is … a self-contradictory windbag, a blind man who teaches others to see. He talks about healing a wound, and does not stop irritating it. He complains of sickness, and does not stop eating what is harmful. … He philosophizes about death, but he behaves as if he were immortal. … He talks of temperance and self-control, but he lives for gluttony. … He reads about vainglory, and is vainglorious while actually reading it. He repeats what he has learnt about vigil, and drops asleep on the spot. He praises prayer, but runs from it as from the plague. He blesses obedience, but he is the first to disobey. He praises detachment, but he is not ashamed to be spiteful and to fight for a rag. When angered, he gets bitter. … He looks people in the face with passion, and talks about chastity. … All the time he is his own accuser, and he does not want to come to his senses–I will not say cannot.

—St. John Climacus, Ladder of Divine Ascent, as found in The Bible and the Holy Fathers for Orthodox

Friday, March 20, 2026

Lenten Meditation -- Fourth Friday of Great Lent

Source: stjohngoc.org

The thing about Confession is that it is natural. That is, it is Real. Almost everything else we do with our sin is false and unnatural. We punish ourselves, justify our actions, and hide. Yet, in Confession—in opening ourselves to God the Light—we expose the hypocrisy of our double life. In truth, we’ve been living a lie. Without Confession, Absolution, and Reconciliation we live a lie before God and Man as if it were Reality. In reality, no one is fooled—not our neighbor, not ourselves. And—let’s be real—certainly not God.

—Fr. Joseph David Huneycutt, Defeating Sin

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Thursday's Theological Thoughts -- The Cross: 'To Refresh Our Souls and Encourage Us'

 

Source: pixnio.com

“Before Thy Cross, we bow down in worship, O Master, and Thy Holy Resurrection, we glorify.”

This hymn – together with the accompanying rite of venerating the Cross – replaces the usual Trisagion hymn during the Divine Liturgy on the Third Sunday of Great Lent. According to The Synaxarion of the Lenten Triodion and Pentecostarion, the full title of this mid-lenten commemoration is “The Sunday of the Veneration of the Precious and Life-Giving Cross.” Notice, that though our concentration is on the Cross of our Lord, the hymn culminates with the Resurrection. This is in full agreement with the Gospel passages in which Christ reveals to His disciples that He is bound for Jerusalem and death on the Cross and that He will rise on the third day. (MK. 8:31; 9:31; 10:34) In a wonderful commentary, The Synaxarion sets before our spiritual sight the meaning of this particular commemoration and its timing: 

The precious and Life-Giving Cross is now placed before us to refresh our souls and encourage us who may be filled with a sense of bitterness, resentment, and depression. The Cross reminds us of the Passion of our Lord, and by presenting to us His example, it encourages us to follow Him in struggle and sacrifice, being refreshed, assured and comforted. [p. 78]

Hopefully, the first three weeks of the Fast – even if we have truly “crucified the flesh with its passions and desires” [Galatians 5:24] – have not led us to experience “bitterness, resentment and depression!” However, we could be suffering from precisely those spiritual wounds for other reasons and diverse circumstances in our lives, both external and internal. My own pastoral experience tells me that this is probably – if not assuredly – the case. And there is no better time than Great Lent to acknowledge this. Such acknowledgment could lead to genuine healing if pursued in a patient and humble manner.


How, then, can we be healed? Perhaps the Sunday of the Cross reveals our basic starting point. The Cross of our Lord, placed before our vision, can release us from our bondage to these passions when we realize that Christ transformed this instrument of pain, suffering and death into an “emblem of victory.” Christ has absorbed and taken our sins upon Himself, nailing them to the Cross. In the process, “He disarmed the principalities and powers and made a public example of them, triumphing over them in Him" -- or, in some variations, “in it,” meaning the Cross [Colossians 2:15]. These “principalities and powers” continue to harass us to this day, but if we are “in Christ,” then we can actualize His victory over them and reveal their actual powerlessness. Our lenten journey is leading us to the foot of the Cross and to the empty and life-giving tomb, and the Third Sunday of Great Lent anticipates our final goal so as to encourage us. Again, from The Synaxarion:

As they who walk on a long and hard way are bowed down by fatigue find great relief and strengthening under the cool shade of a leafy tree, so do we find comfort, refreshment, and rejuvenation under the Life-Giving Cross, which our Holy Fathers 'planted' on this Sunday. Thus, we are fortified and enabled to continue our Lenten journey with a light way, rested and encouraged. [p. 79]


Certainly none of the above is meant to deflect our attention away from the “scandal of the Cross” by poeticizing this scandal away in pious rhetoric. We must never lose sight of the sufferings of our Lord on the Cross, and the “price” He paid to release us from bondage to sin and death. The world in its indifference will never come to understand the enormity of Christ’s sacrifice. So as not to lose sight of the utter horror of crucifixion as a form of capital punishment, I would like to include a passage from Martin Hengel’s book Crucifixion:

Crucifixion satisfied the primitive lust for revenge and the sadistic cruelty of individual rulers and of the masses. It was usually associated with other forms of torture, including at least flogging. At relatively small expense and to great public effect the criminal could be tortured to death for days in an unspeakable way. Crucifixion is thus a specific expression of the inhumanity dormant within men which these days is expressed, for example, in the call for the death penalty, for popular justice and for harsher treatment of criminals, as an expression of retribution. It is a manifestation of trans-subjective evil, a form of execution which manifests the demonic character of human cruelty and bestiality. [p. 87]


So much for the “noble simplicity and greatness” of the ancient world - and the contemporary world, for that matter! But there is “nothing new under the sun,” and fallen human nature is just as cruel and evil today. Again, Christ absorbed all of that human cruelty and bestiality on the Cross. This was a scandal, for the Son of God died the death of a slave on the Cross [Philippians 2:8]. Now, as a “new creation” in Christ, we must of course manifest our freedom from precisely that dark and demonic abyss into which human beings can plunge, and manifest the transfiguration of our human “energy” into the virtues that are so wonderfully revealed in the lives of the saints. This was the prayer of the Apostle Paul when the light of the crucified and risen Lord began to shine in a world of darkness: 

May you be strengthened with all power, according to His glorious might, for all endurance and patience with joy, giving thanks to the Father who has qualified us [or you] to share in the inheritance of the saints in light. He has delivered us from the dominion of darkness and transferred us to the Kingdom of His beloved Son, in Whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. [Colossians 1:14]


The Church understands and will put before our gaze the sufferings of the Lord during Holy Week. But it is also from within the Church that we come to know the victory of Christ achieved through His death on the Cross and fully revealed in His Resurrection. Thus the marvelous paradox of venerating a “Life-Giving Cross!” The rhetoric of the Church’s language is thereby not empty but revelatory of a mystery that has been accomplished in our midst.  The Synaxarion concludes its section on “The Sunday of the Veneration of the Precious and Life-Giving Cross” with the following prayer, a fitting way, I hope, to conclude this meditation: 

O Christ our God, through the power of the Holy Cross, deliver us from the influence of our crafty enemy and count us worthy to pass with courage through the course of the forty days and to venerate Thy divine Passion and Thy Life-Giving Resurrection. Be merciful to us, for Thou alone art good and full of love for mankind. Amen.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

In Memory of Protopresbyter Thomas Hopko

 

Source: oca.org

This just came to me today from St. Vladimir's Seminary. I will assume that just about everybody in the parish has either read or listened to Fr. Thomas Hopko at some point in time, and that includes our newly-baptized/chrismated members, present catechumens and inquirers. For Fr. Hopko's four volume set on Orthodox Christianity has been required reading in our Catechetical Class for years now. 

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Today we remember Protopresbyter Thomas Hopko (March 28, 1939–March 18, 2015), our beloved former dean and profoundly gifted priest, theologian, preacher, and speaker.

Members of the St. Vladimir's Seminary community, led by Archpriest Alexander Rentel and Dean Dr. IonuČ›-Alexandru Tudorie, will conduct memorial prayers this week at the graves of Fr. Thomas and Matushka Anne at the Orthodox Monastery of the Holy Transfiguration in Ellwood City, PA.

May the memories of Fr. Thomas and Matushka Anne be eternal!

The Life of Fr Thomas Hopko 
Books & Audio 
Sermons & Lectures 
Podcasts 

Unfortunately, the purple bars above obscure the link's title of each of them. For clarity: the first link is to The Life of Fr. Thomas Hopko; the second to Books & Audio; the third to Sermons and Lectures; and the fourth to Podcasts. 

I discourage "Internet Orthodoxy," but one exception is certainly Fr. Thomas Hopko. He is not only "safe" and guaranteed not to mislead any genuine inquirer; but he will proclaim Orthodox Christianity with great vibrancy, inspiration and insight. So, you may want to avail yourselves of some of what is offered here as we seek to grow toward the full stature of Christ.

Coffee With Sister Vassa -- RAINBOWS & GOD’S OTHER SIGNS

 

And the Lord God said to Noah, This is the sign of the covenant which I set between me and you, and between every living creature which is with you for perpetual generations. I set my rainbow in the cloud, and it shall be for a sign of covenant between me and the earth. And it shall be when I gather clouds upon the earth, that my rainbow shall be seen in the cloud. And I will remember my covenant, which is between me and you, and between every living soul in all flesh, and there shall no longer be water for a flood, so as to blot out all flesh.” (Gen 9: 12-15)

So, a “ rainbow in a cloud” is a special “ sign of covenant,” of a certain kind of agreement, understanding, or, simply put, “connection” that God has with us, also among our ‘clouds’ and storms. Really there are countless “signs” in God’s created world, which point us to Him as our common Creator, if we have the eyes to see. But we don’t always have those eyes, as Simon and Garfunkel note in their brilliant song, “ My Little Town”: “ And after it rains, there’s a rainbow, / And all of the colors are black, / It’s not that the colors aren’t there, / It’s just imagination they lack, / Everything’s the same back / In my little town.”

Today I’m reminded that God has His “signs” all over the place, as the Holy Spirit continues to “rain” and pour out His mercy most abundantly on “ my little town.” Everything is never the same, from day to day, in the abundance of “colors” God shows me in the people, places and things He brings my way. Let me be both grateful and teachable today, that I can learn more about His presence and grace in our midst, even if the skies above our world are not cloudless.