Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Day Three: This Blessed Opportunity


Dear Parish Faithful and Friends in Christ,


O Lord, Thou hast consecrated and granted unto us this light-giving season of abstinence. Enable all of us to pass through it in compunction and sincerity, living in peace by the power of Thy Cross, O Thou who alone lovest mankind.
(Wednesday Matins of the First Week of Lent)


We have chanted the first two parts of the Canon of Repentance by St. Andrew of Crete (+740) on Monday and Tuesday evening respectively. We anticipate parts three and four this evening and then again on Thursday. Please avail yourselves of this blessed opportunity to enter the Lenten atmosphere of the Church with openness and humility – both pre-conditions for true repentance. The church is the place to be! Toward the end of the canon – in Ode Nine of part one to be precise – St. Andrew explains the purpose behind the canon itself and its numerous biblical allusions:

I have reminded you, O my soul, from the Books of Moses how the world was created, and from accounts throughout the Old Testament have shown examples of both the righteous and the unrighteous …

But he then “gets our attention” by phrasing a categorical charge that concludes this troparion:

… But of these you have imitated the latter rather than the former, and thereby sinned against your God.

St. Andrew has offered a generalization on the human condition by humbly sharing his own sense of sinfulness based on an honest assessment of his own deeds, words and thoughts. Is anyone willing to disagree with him? Yet, if our honest self-assessment does agree with him – reluctantly or not – does this mean that we are to understand ourselves as “sinners in the hands of an angry God?” As that phrase has come to be used and understood, the answer would be NO. It is basically outside of the Orthodox tradition to understand sin as a means to increase our sense of abjectness before God or even of self-loathing. Such an attitude was the “logical” outcome of an anthropology that reduced humankind to a mass of damnation or total depravity. That attitude may be in the process of being corrected or abandoned today (or overly-compensated for by almost eliminating the reality and expression of sin); but it surely wreaked its havoc over the centuries on how human persons understood their relationship with God. With very different presuppositions about God (theology) and human nature (anthropology), St. Andrew is calling us to our former glory as human persons created for life “in the image and likeness of God.”

Essentially, then, we are sinners in the hands of a merciful God: “Have mercy on me, O God, have mercy on me,” is the constant refrain that illuminates the meaning of repentance that is so movingly invoked by St. Andrew’s masterpiece of liturgical poetry, biblical exegesis and probing psychological insight. This mercy is the “steadfast love” of God that desires the salvation of all. Although sin is a sickness that affects and distorts, both soul and body, the recognition of sin is a sign of spiritual health and maturity. Is it at all possible to repent without the prior recognition of sin? And repentance is itself the healing process that restores our fellowship with God. A fellowship that we were created for “in the beginning” and now renewed and re-established “in Christ!” The person who falsely protects himself from this soul-saving recognition of sin by the subterfuge of rationalization and self-deception only intensifies his stricken condition. If not recognized, arrested and reversed, such a sickness can truly be “unto death!” The voice of the world that lies to us by telling us there are no sins, but only “choices” – or that a sense of sinfulness is emotionally and psychologically crippling – only guides us into that endless cycle of pain and pleasure from which one “can’t get no satisfaction.”

St. Andrew further relates his purpose in explaining his use of the New Testament:

Therefore, O my soul, I will remind you of examples from the New Testament to lead you to contrition. Imitate the righteous and shun the ways of sinners that through prayer, fasting, purity, and reverence you may obtain the mercy of Christ.

To acknowledge, admit, and confess our sins is to obtain the “mercy of Christ.” Not grudgingly given, but given in abundance. We need to give ourselves the opportunity to respond to this heartfelt plea by immersing ourselves into the life of the Church during Great Lent; and specifically to make ourselves present if at all possible for the chanting of St. Andrew’s Canon of Repentance.

In Christ,

Fr. Steven

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Day Two: Cell-Phone Fasting?


Dear Parish Faithful,

As we begin the second day of saving abstinence, we cry to Thee, O Lord: Pierce the hearts of us Thy servants with compunction and accept the prayers we offer Thee in fear. Grant us without stumbling to complete the course of the Fast, and bestow upon us cleansing and great mercy. (Tuesday Matins of the First Week)


In addition to all of the wonderful material that our webservant has assembled and posted on our parish website for Great Lent; there is currently playing a series of superb talks on Ancient Faith Radio entitled “Journeys Through Great Lent” (www.ancientfaith.com). You will hear Fr. Thomas Hopko, Frederica Matthews-Green, Fr. Melitios Webber, and Scott Cairns.

In a recent gathering with our Young Adult Group, we got on the subject of cell phones – their use and misuse. Both Johnothon Sauer, our Youth Group leader, and I, spoke about the pervasiveness and invasiveness of the cell phone when they essentially become an extension of our very being – or so it may seem. Texting, twittering, cameras, internet – it is all there as ubiquitous as can be. There is no end to the limitless “delights” that the more sophisticated cell phone of today can now provide. Of course, we also explored the beneficial use of the cell phone in today’s society. Everyone probably has a “cell-phone story” about how its presence and use “saved” us from one calamity or another in a crisis or emergency situation. However, we both ended by issuing something of a challenge to our young adults: When Great Lent arrives, incorporate “cell-phone fasting” into your over-all Lenten effort. This may be even more fruitful for adult Orthodox Christians!

If we have reached the point of dependence wherein we are convinced that we “cannot live” without our cell-phones (though the category of “civilization” actually pre-dates the arrival of the cell-phone); then are we able and willing to practice some form of abstinence in relation to it, as Lenten fasting is meant to liberate us from an overwhelming dependence on the things of “this world?” Are we currently using our cell phones when necessary; or have they also become toys that we periodically play with out of boredom or a sense of needed amusement/distraction? Are we calling others when there is no real reason to?; and are we texting the usual semi-vacuous “luv u?” messages? My pastoral suggestion is to formulate a strategy that helps liberate us from precisely this kind of dependence and need for distraction. Is it possible to limit our cell-phone use to calling others when needed through the normal course of the day, and eliminate the superfluous? Can we limit our cell-phone usage to times other than when we are behind the wheel of our cars? If we try some of this kind of “fasting,” perhaps we will be surprised – if not mildly shocked - as to the extent of that dependency I just mentioned above. It is more than food and drink that hold us in bondage.

I am not trying to romantically resurrect the Middle Ages; or take us back to a pre-technological – if not pre-industrial – age. I am trying to locate those areas of contemporary living that seem to sweep us along with an unquestioning adherence to its norms and practices. And the cell-phone readily came to mind!

Just some thoughts …

In Christ,

Fr. Steven

Monday, March 7, 2011

Day One: Joyfulness, Perseverance & Integration


Dear Parish Faithful,

Let us joyfully begin the all-hallowed season of abstinence; and let us shine with the bright radiance of the holy commandments of Christ our God, with the brightness of love and the splendor of prayer, with the purity of holiness and the strength of good courage. So, clothed in raiment of light, let us hasten to the Holy Resurrection on the third day, that shines upon the world with the glory of eternal life.
(Matins of Monday in the First Week of the Fast).


I would like to wish one and all a blessed Lenten journey as we embark on the course of the fast on this “Clean Monday,” the first day of Great Lent. We are well aware of the challenges ahead of us, but these challenges and our resolve to meet them with humility, but also with firmness of faith, only reinforces how essential it is to live according to the Orthodox Way as the surest preparation for the paschal mystery. We have two basic choices to make: to respond with perseverance as we “gird our loins” to cross over the desert of the fast en route to the “Land of the Living” where we encounter the Risen Lord; or … we can wimp out! I trust that only the former choice is uppermost in your minds and hearts.

We are given the tools of the ascetical life by Christ Himself: prayer, almsgiving and fasting. At our most basic biological level we need to eat and drink to sustain our lives. Yet our passions transform that need into its opposite: to live in order to eat. As Christ teaches us: “Man does not live by bread alone.” That is the truth we would like to “taste” as we are tested by fasting.

In addition, we have the following tools to strengthen us in our Lenten efforts:

+ the many liturgical services unique to Great Lent;

+ the reading of the Scriptures;

+ faithfulness in prayer;

+ the confession of our sins in the Mystery of Repentance;

+ the love of our neighbor through almsgiving.


As I said yesterday in the homily: come up with a “domestic strategy” which allows you to integrate the season of Great Lent into your lives; rather than reduce it to some symbolic gestures. Be balanced, but be serious.

I hope to see many of you this evening as we chant the first part of the compunctionate Canon of Repentance by St. Andrew of Crete.

Fr. Steven

Friday, March 4, 2011

The Quite Remarkable First Week






Dear Parish Faithful,

The First Week of Great Lent is quite remarkable, especially in its unique liturgical services. I strongly urge everyone to make it to at least one of the services for this week. I also urge parents to do the same with their children, at least those of school age and up. Make the appropriate plans, even at the expense of “convenience.”

It is good for the impressionable souls of your children to experience the Lenten worship of the Church. In the Church we encounter God and not mammon. We are losing the battle with cell phones, twitters, TV sitcoms, “American idols” and the rest in our “spend and entertain yourselves at all times and at all costs don’t be silent or still for one second go for it and don’t slow down for anything including God culture.” There are times that we must say NO to that and keep our focus on God. Great Lent is that time. Or, as the Apostle Paul said: “Redeem the time, for the days are evil.” (EPH. 5:16) Your next-door neighbor may or may not have the Church to bring holiness, virtue and basic human decency into their lives – but you do!

Actually, before we get to Monday evening, participating in Forgiveness Vespers and the rite of forgiveness is a blessed way to begin the Lenten season. Forgiveness Vespers begins after some refreshments following the Liturgy.

Fr. Steven

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

On Lenten Practices


Dear Parish Faithful,

As we “gird our loins” for the lenten struggle that commences next Monday, March 7, I will periodically send out some reminders about the various types of practices that we embrace on a more intense level during this season. There are three such articles attached to this letter, [in printable PDF format] dealing respectively with prayer, almsgiving and fasting. Please read them carefully at your convenience.

In Christ,
Fr. Steven