Friday, March 20, 2020

The Cross: 'To Refresh Our Souls and Encourage Us'


Dear Parish Faithful,


The Third Sunday of Great Lent - the Sunday of the Cross - must take on a greater resonance for us as we continue to struggle with the ever-encroaching presence of the coronavirus. 
 
Of course, our church services are severely limited and most of you will find yourselves at home on Sunday morning. But during that time, everyone should take a conscious break away from the internet, from our smartphones and from our televisions and turn to the Gospel and prayer. 
 
As I continue to say, the Gospel reveals the "big picture" about life and death. For the Lord transformed an instrument of death into a path to life everlasting. As a nation, we are collectively taking up a cross despite our unwillingness to put our current crisis in that language. The Cross of Christ has no place whatsoever in a society enamored with a sense of entitlement and the guarantee of a "good life." (In a secular society can there even be a source to this entitlement and this guarantee of a good life?). 
 
Yet, as Christians, we claim to be "cross-bearers," as opposed to simply being "cross-wearers." We trust in the Lord and place ourselves in His hands. We continue to pray for a swift end to this pandemic. And yet, the future days, weeks and months ahead of us remain an unsettling prospect of further disorientation. So, let us make room for the Cross and Resurrection to fill in the "big picture."

The following meditation from a few years ago, is meant to focus our attention on Christ as we journey further into Great Lent and the great culmination of the Cross and Resurrection. This is our hope and our joy!

_____

The Cross: 'To Refresh Our Souls and Encourage Us'




Dear Parish Faithful and Friends in Christ, 

“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.


Thursday, March 19, 2020

Prayers and a Paragraph


Dear Parish Faithful.



The link below is to a Special Prayer Service seeking deliverance and protection from the coronavirus. I believe it comes from the OCA Diocese of New York/New Jersey. It is meant to be prayed before one's icon corner. Please avail yourselves of it as you see best.

https://nynjoca.org/files/2020/covid-19/covid-19-prayer-service.pdf

I have also included a paragraph that I found on a particular diocesan website that, I believe, is just the right response to what we are going through. We commemorate the Cross of our Lord this coming Sunday, and we look to the Crucified One as our ultimate salvation.

We find ourselves in a Lent that is not typical, but offers us the chance at real asceticism. We have been given our own metaphorical desert to labor in. We have the opportunity to pray more diligently and intentionally than before. While we are separated by distance, we are joined by faith. We are never truly alone for we are surrounded by that great cloud of witnesses. And when we, at last, emerge on the other side of this time of trial, and can once again join together in the fullness of the liturgical worship of the Church, it will be as glorious as Pascha for our path must always pass through the Cross before it can arrive at the Resurrection.



Wednesday, March 18, 2020

COVID Update 3/18 - With Caution, Trust and Prayer


Dear Parish Faithful,


"In my distress, I cry to the Lord, that He may answer me." (Psalm 120:1)

"My help comes from the Lord who made heaven and earth." (Psalm 121:2)

"Give thanks to the Lord, for He is good, for His steadfast love endures forever." (Psalm 136:1)


Attached is His Grace, Bp. Paul's directive for our Diocese of the Midwest. My own parish directives, based on what is written here, follow immediately below.


Icon of the Theotokos and St Luke the Surgeon of Crimea, directing a physician, with Christ Pantocrator.

We continue to navigate a less than friendly landscape as we struggle with our best response to COVID-19. My position is to approach this will all-due seriousness and then formulate directives accordingly. If we are to "err," it will be on the side of caution. One thing we are not going to do is to "tempt" God by "proving" our faithfulness by making careless decisions. The Apostle Paul teaches there is such a thing as "zeal for God, but not according to knowledge." (Rom. 10:2) We are dealing with a scientific/medical/biological issue with this virus, and we need to trust our health care professionals who are working tirelessly to limit the effect of this pandemic as much as that is humanly possible. We should also pray for our doctors, nurses, health care workers, and all others who are on the "front line" in this battle.

Be that as it may, the plan, at least tentatively at the moment, is to celebrate the Divine Liturgy on Sunday morning, March 22, at 9:30 a.m. We will be severely limited in that only 10 persons are able to be present. This is the directive of Bishop Paul, our diocesan hierarch (based on the most current guidelines of the CDC). This allows for "social distancing," one of the crucial strategies meant to limit the spread of the virus. Trying to figure out the best way to do this is difficult, but what I have come with up is the following: I would ask those of you who are willing to come to the Liturgy to inform me, and I will compose a list. I will draw from this list on a weekly basis (anticipating that this will continue for many weeks to come). As it is, that number ten is further limited in that room must be made for the priest, at least one deacon, and two-three choir members. Perhaps the reader will be drawn from among the choir members.

To again state the obvious, anyone who feels the slightest bit ill should not consider coming to church at the present moment. Be aware of what health professionals are warning about the "age factor." The older we are, the more threatening is the virus. Anyone with any type of medical condition that compromises one's immune system should also apply common sense and not come to church. This is crucial not only for you, but also for your neighbor.

Again, send me a note indicating that you would like to come to church on these Sundays when we must limit our numbers.

For the moment, that is my pastoral directive. If anything changes, I will alert the parish immediately.

In Christ,
Fr. Steven

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

UPDATES: Statement from Holy Synod, Schedule Changes, more




Dear Parish Faithful,

Christ is in our midst!
He is and ever shall be!


Here is the latest statement from the Holy Synod of Bishops. To be brief for the moment, here is what I have decided for upcoming liturgical services, based on what is presented here:

  • The Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts for tomorrow evening will be cancelled.
  • Our next service will the Divine Liturgy on Sunday morning, March 22, the Third Sunday of Great Lent and also the Sunday of the Cross. 
  • We will serve the Vesperal Liturgy for the Feast of the Annunciation on Wednesday evening, March 25.

I will write in further detail tomorrow. My main concern is working out a system that will limit our liturgical gatherings to ten faithful parishioners in response to the CDC's directive to do so. That, in itself, is complicated. His Grace Bishop Paul is following that directive and will do so until further changes, if any, are recommended. If conditions continue to worsen, and a new directive from the CDC is issued, than I will make a further reassessment based on that directive.

Again, we are facing unprecedented conditions with the outbreak of the coronavirus; and I am trying to act as responsibly as possible bearing the moral responsibility that I carry for each and every member of our community's well-being - both spiritual and physical.

As I wrote the other day, continue observing Great Lent among your families. The crucified Lord of Glory is with us all "unto the end of the age." (Matt. 28:20)

In Christ,
Fr. Steven

______________

From: "Archdeacon Joseph Matusiak"
To: "steven k"
Sent: Tuesday, March 17, 2020 3:09:39 PM
Subject: Holy Synod Statement on COVID-19 & Archpastoral Letter of His Beatitude

Reverend Fathers,

On Monday, March 16, 2020, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon convened a special meeting of the Holy Synod. Following a day of meetings with health-care experts, Metropolitan Tikhon led the Holy Synod in a discussion on the effects of the spreading outbreak on the parishes, clergy, and faithful of the Orthodox Church in America.

Following that meeting His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon and the members of the Holy Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America have today issued a further statement on the Coronavirus outbreak which can be read here.

At the same time, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon has issued an Archpastoral Letter to the clergy, monastics and faithful of the Orthodox Church in America which can be read here.

Please be sure to check our resource page on the Coronavirus outbreak. We are updating it regularly.

Archdeacon Joseph


Monday, March 16, 2020

An Unforeseen Lent - Reflections and Pastoral Guidance & Helps


Dear Parish Faithful,


"For he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends his rain on the just and on the unjust." (Matt. 5:45)

"For God shows no partiality." (Rom. 2:11)

"O Lord, save Thy people and bless Thine Inheritance!"


The Second Sunday of Great Lent -

We served the Liturgy of St. Basil yesterday morning and there were eight of us present. Felt something like a weekday Liturgy. Yet, it was very prayerful and peaceful. In the Liturgy of Preparation, I prayed for the entire parish; and the Liturgy was offered "on behalf of all."


Christ healing the Ten Lepers

An Unforeseen Lent -

It was only two weeks ago, that we embarked on our lenten journey together as a parish community and within our own homes. Looking back two weeks ago, I am fairly certain that no one envisioned the environment that we are now find ourselves in with the outbreak and continuing spread of the coronavirus. Two weeks ago, it was still "over there," but now it is "here," and that changes everything. 

Everyone, of course, may have his or her own level of anxiety and unease - perhaps even fear - but we are in uncharted territory in the overall scheme of things today. This is all new for us. And yet, we are apparently making the necessary adjustments from day-to-day, as our normal life routines have been put on indefinite hold. You may or may not be at work at the same level; and your children are now home for the foreseeable future. No picnic on that account! 

I am now awaiting further pastoral directives by tomorrow from His Grace, Bishop Paul, but I am rather certain that our liturgical cycle will continue to be disrupted at least for the immediate future. (I would say that it is "most unlikely" that we will serve the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gift this coming Wednesday evening).


My pastoral concern is that we allow this to overwhelm us to a such an extent that we also suspend our lenten efforts and put our Church life "on hold" until life is again normalized. I believe that this would be a costly mistake because it is precisely the lenten lifestyle that will keep us focused on Christ at at time when that is essential for our interior well-being as we face this crisis, both as unique persons, as a community of faithful Orthodox Christians, and as members of our local communities. 

Our "spiritual lives" are not just one more pious option that we embrace or ignore based upon the condition of our "comfort zones" or immediate emotional or psychological needs. We always need Christ - actually "the One thing needful" - and especially when we are "anxious" (see Matt. 6:25-34). Christ is our only true consolation. 

So, I strongly encourage everyone to continue with the lenten lifestyle that you decided upon just two weeks ago. We all know how to make the necessary adjustments when needed. But the discipline alone of the lenten effort will surely strengthen us all and maintain within us a sense of purpose, even more so at a time of disruptive events.


With that in mind, I would like to offer some pastoral guidelines that, even if obvious, may be actually helpful to bring these things to mind:


+ Continue your Rule of Prayer, for sure both in the morning and in the evening. I will assume that we all have an Orthodox Prayer Book. Some are more comprehensive than others, and if you look through them, you will find prayers that are written by the saints for precisely "times of trouble." You may find a Canon of Repentance, or perhaps an Akathist to Jesus Christ or the Theotokos, These are now most timely.


+ Continue using the Lenten Prayer of St. Ephraim at home, alone or with the family. It is a powerful prayer as it is, but by using it at home it keeps us connected with the life of the Church. Our home, as St.John Chrysostom teaches is a "small church."


+ Continue your scriptural reading as you planned for this Great Lent. I would suggest chanting/reading a few psalms each day. The great penitential psalms are: 6; 32; 38; 51; 102; 130; 143. Our parish website has the daily readings all printed out, together with the lives of the saints on their day of commemoration. Avail yourselves of this excellent resource.


+ Continue with the lenten reading that you chose two weeks ago. At a time such as this, we need to be reminded of the "big picture" within which our lives unfold both in times of serenity and times of upheaval. Our Orthodox literature does that with great depth and insight.


+ Continue in the fasting practices that you chose to embrace two weeks ago to the extent to which that is possible. Outside of medical reasons or the unavailability of the fasting foods that we eat, I am not sure why we should abandon these practices. As I said above, the discipline of the fast in its own way gives us a sense of day-to-day continuity and purpose, and again, keeps us connected to the Church.



+ Keeping up with the Services of the Church. I rather doubt that many of you have a copy of The Triodion at home (!) to read the lenten services. Be that as it may, there are now many websites that provide streaming services that allow you "participate" to some extent in the liturgical services. Some have already told me how they watched the Liturgy at the Holy Transfiguration Monastery yesterday morning. I also sent out a copy of The Reader Service that is used when we cannot have the full Liturgy. Avail yourselves of these sources.


I would like to add, that we should all practice common sense and adhere to all of the helpful practical guidelines that are being given to us to help minimize the opportunities for the coronavirus to invade our lives. By now, we all know these thoroughly. By responsibly following these guidelines with care we can only help ourselves and our families - and our neighbors. It is "bad theology" to think that our "faith" will keep us safe. That really has nothing to do with it if you read the words of Christ quoted at the beginning of this letter. All are susceptible. For we all live in the same world with its manifold imperfections and brokenness. If we get sick, then it is our faith that carries us through that sickness together with medical care. No matter what happens we are always in the hands of God. That is our faith - the faith that has "overcome the world" (Jn. 16:33).