Friday, November 10, 2023

The Angelic World

 

 

 Dear Parish Faithful,

The passage below is taken from a homily by the late Metropolitan John Zizioulas of Pergamon. The title is the "Synaxis of the Holy Angels," and it was delivered on November 8, 2005, the date on which we commemorate the Archangels Michael and Gabriel and and all of the bodiless powers. We celebrated this feast just this week with Great Vespers and the Liturgy. And we also chanted an Akathist Hymn to Archangel Michael the day after the feast. The feast is already past, but this is a timely excerpt from the end of this fine homily that I wanted to share with the parish. And since the Liturgy on the Lord's Day is approaching, an "event" in which the angels are together with us and serving with us, this passage is a good reminder as to where we need to turn our gaze and "attention" so as not to become indifferent to the invisible world:
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My beloved brothers and sisters, we live in a materialistic world, in a world, in a culture - a so-called culture, at any rate - which deals with nothing but matter. How will we satisfy our material needs, how will we increase our bodily enjoyment, how will we increase our pleasure. Our world today is nothing but a struggle to increase our standard of living, our wealth, a struggle without end, a struggle which subjects us to mental and physical fatigue and makes us lose our faith in a world which is not material. So the angels today, my beloved brothers and sisters, are calling us to leave the earth, to think that our destiny is to be together with the angels close to God, because that is where our happiness lies and not in the material goods of this world. And that is precisely why today's feast is an opportunity that our Church uses to send a message that there is an intangible world, that matter is not everything, that our destiny is to unite with this intangible world and to be close to the glory of God.

...Our ancestors lived with this faith in the angelic world. They believed that angels accompany them in their journeys and that at the end of their lives, angels receive their souls and take them to the throne of God. Let us acquire this simple faith again, my dear brothers and sisters, in this materialistic world in which we live. Let us be a light, a witness, a true witness to the glory of God. Amen!

From Receive One Another - 101 Sermons by Metropolitan John of Pergamon.