Thursday, October 30, 2008

Homilies Online

I have been posting my homilies online on the parish website www.stmichaelorth.org and now they can be heard on Ancient Faith Radio.

Ancient Faith Talk, part of the family, will be airing my Sunday homilies on Mondays at 4:45am and 4:45pm and on Fridays at 2:45am and 2:45pm do tune in if you get a chance. There are some great shows on Ancient Faith Talk and great music on Ancient Faith Radio. You can tune in here.

Ancient Faith Radio
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Speaking

If you are looking for a speaker for a conference or a parish mission or the like my speaking calendar is now being managed by the Orthodox Speakers Bureau. There are many great speakers there as well. So if you would like to book me for something follow this link.
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Still Here

Well I am still here and still suffering with this cold. I hate being sick and since I am alone I still have to do all the house stuff and prepare my own meals. I am not complaining because I like to eat when I want to eat and not when someone wants me to eat but now I am out of food and need to go shopping. Today sounds like a good day for beef stew.

So I have just been hanging around this week and trying to get over this cold. Last night I met with one of my Spiritual Children. I was going to cancel but we have been trying to meet for a month and we finally settled on a date so I thought I should stick to it. I am glad I did. I need to get back in the swing of things.

So I watched the Obama infomercial last night. Good concept, I don't think anyone has ever done that before I am not sure it changed any minds but you gotta do what you gotta do as they say.

In Massachusetts we have three questions on the ballot. I am thinking of writing something on them over the next few days so look for that as well. I have my show to record today and get off to the radio stations and some reading to do. Tomorrow I am on the air at 7am so that will be fun. We have the principal of the High School coming in for a chat. He is a great guy and pulls no punches so it should be interesting.

Okay gang thanks for reading!
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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Radio

Most of you know that my podcast Shepherd of Souls is now on the radio on a few stations in Massachusetts and some n New York as well. You may also know that I have been co hosting the Friday morning show on WESO in Southbridge. This has been great.

Today I had a meeting with the station manager and we talked about expanding my radio ministry. I am going to have my own show starting in a few weeks on WESO 970am in Southbridge. The format will be a call in type of show called something like Soul Mending or Mending Souls. I hope to chat with folks about what is bothering them and see if I can help them as a Spiritual Guide.

Any thoughts on a title?
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Facing East #31

Episode 31 is now online. In this episode we kick back and chat about the Liturgy of St. James. We had just finished the Liturgy and we thought we would chat it up.

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Monday, October 27, 2008

Where have I Been?

This has just been a crazy week. I hope this week is a little less crazy but so far not the case. I am up at 5am to head to the radio station for 7am to do the morning radio show. I am filling in for the regular host and on top of all of that I have a nasty cold. This should be good.

So let's back up a little. Wednesday night Fr. Greg and I celebrated the Liturgy of St. James in honor of his feast day the next day. This is one of the oldest liturgies that the church has and it is very different from what we Orthodox are used too on Sunday morning. We had about 35 people there, not bad for a week night.
Thursday I continued the Adult Education class here in the Village with a class on what the term preferential option for the poor means to us. I did record this lecture and as soon as I can I will try and post it so you can listen.

Friday morning I was at the radio station at 6:45. I am now a regular on the Friday morning show on WESO 970am in Southbridge. This is a fun little diversion and give me an opportunity to reach an entirely different audience. I kind of like doing drive time radio. Friday night was the annual turkey party here in the Village. Great crowd and a great time was had by all. We need to have more events like this to bring people here. Thanks to all the workers.

Saturday, well Saturday is the day I get the bulletin ready and sermons, laundry, etc. That's when I started with this cold and I spent most of the day on the sofa watching the idiot box. Saturday night I joined my fellow fire fighters for the annual steak supper at the fire house. Small crowd this year but the food was great. Excellent turnout from St. Mike's and we all sat together and enjoyed some laughs.

Sunday morning is routine. Up at 5am put the finishing touches on the sermon and get ready for Liturgy. Shepherd of Souls goes on at 8:30 and I like to listen a bit to see how the edit went. The new show is up at www.shpherdofsouls.com so give it a listen if you have a chance.

Well that brings things full circle. I am off in a few minutes to get to the station. I solo today and I am a bit nervous so say a little prayer for me if you get a chance.
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Friday, October 24, 2008

Fidel Castro considers Metropolitan Kirill his ally in opposing

Havana, October 23, Interfax - The former Cuban leader Fidel Castro stated that Chairman of the Moscow Patriarchate Department for External Church Relations Metropolitan Kirill of Smolensk and Kaliningrad shared his views on the US foreign policy.

"There is no reason to make any minor concession to the Yankee imperialism. I have an impression that His Eminence shares my opinion," he says in his article published by Granma - the paper of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party.

"He is not anti-Muslim, he respects this religion. In frames of his ecumenical conception, he believes that the Catholic Church can solve its problems with such countries as China and Vietnam," Castro said.

Fidel Castro confessed he had an "agreeable and edifying" meeting with Metropolitan Kirill who is visiting the countries of Latin America.

"His Eminence is no enemy of socialism and doesn't condemn to the eternal fire those like us basing on Marxism-Leninism to fight for just world. When he speaks to the UN Human Rights Commission and other organizations, they listen to him with great respect. In his enormous country, he often speaks on a 15 minute TV program and dozen million people follow him with interest," the article went on to say.

Speaking about recent consecration of the first Russian Church in Cuba conducted by Metropolitan Kirill, Castro noted that the capital of his country "has been enriched with a church worthy of a prestigious Russian Orthodox Church." According to the Cuban leader,
it is an irrefutable proof of Cuba's respect to "one of the fundamental principle of human rights, which is consonant to the profound and radical socialist revolution."
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Displaced Families Facing Harsh Winter

Tskvarichamia, Georgia — The leaves have already changed in Tskvarichamia, a mountain hamlet about 15 miles above Tbilisi. For the 16 families taking shelter in a modest building, this is not a herald of the harvest, but rather, an ominous reminder that winter is coming and they are not prepared.

At dusk, two mothers, their children and an elderly couple sit on the front porch and explain to an aid worker that the rest of the families have gone to the authorities to protest their living conditions and to demand that they be moved to Tbilisi. “We feel cut off up here,” says Nanna, carrying her small son on her lap. “It is cold and we cannot properly care for our children.” She and her husband were farmers in the village of Kemerti in South Ossetia, and like many who were displaced by this summer’s fighting between Russian and Georgian forces, they fled with little more than the clothes on their backs.

The group that had gone to Tbilisi return, and seeing the visitor immediately launch into a litany of complaints. They have no kitchen utensils. Blankets were delivered but the mattresses are no good. Above all, the building was formerly used as a summer camp for children and there is not enough insulation from the cold. “We may be blocked up here from other areas in the winter and our children have to go to school,” says one woman.

Inside the building there is a strong smell from toilets that are backed up. In the hallway, there is a list of government phone numbers such as “how to find a missing relative.” The hallway leads to a series of bedrooms with thin walls and blankets draped over windows.

The group moves from room to room, eager to show the aid worker mattresses atop rusty springs and thin blankets that were delivered in August. Some speculate about their neighbors, Ossetians who fled to Russia. “We had good relations with them because of the mixed families,” says one woman. She believes that those families got an offer to go back to South Ossetia, where Georgians can no longer return.

International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) has been providing continuous assistance to thousands of displaced people who fled to other parts of Georgia, as well as Russia, since the August conflict began. Through a new $200,000 grant by the Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA), IOCC will help 2,000 individuals get through the winter by providing stoves, fuel for cooking and heating, bedding, winter clothes, and cooking supplies. IOCC is cooperating with the Georgian Orthodox Church and local authorities to identify and assist families in 20 displacement centers in and around Tbilisi, including the families of Tskvarichamia.

These families want to return to their villages in South Ossetia, a hope that is fading as the months pass on. “The hardest feeling,” says Elsa, a 32-year-old mother of two, “is to not know what has happened to everything that we built and worked for.”

To help in providing emergency relief, call IOCC’s donation hotline toll-free at 1-877-803-4622, make a gift on-line at www.iocc.org, or mail a check or money order payable to “IOCC” and write “Conflict in the Caucasus” in the memo line to: IOCC, P.O. Box 630225, Baltimore, Md. 21263-0225.

IOCC, founded in 1992 as the official humanitarian aid agency of the Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas (SCOBA), has implemented over $275 million in relief and development programs in 33 countries around the world.
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The passing of the U.S. Orthodox Church as an 'ethnic club' is under way

These were the sad, sobering conversations that priests have when no one else is listening.

Father John Peck kept hearing other priests pour out their frustrations on the telephone. Some, like Peck, were part of the Orthodox Church in America, a church with Russian roots that has been rocked by years of high-level scandals. But others were active in churches with "old country" ties back to other Eastern Orthodox lands.

"These men really felt that their churches weren't getting anywhere," he said. "They kept saying, 'What am I giving my life for? What have I accomplished?' I kept trying to cheer them up, telling them to look 20 years down the road. ... I told them to try to see the bigger picture."

Eventually, the 46-year-old priest wrote an article about the positive Orthodox trends in America, as well as offering candid talk about the problems faced by some of his friends. He finished "The Orthodox Church of Tomorrow" soon after arriving at the Greek Orthodox mission in Prescott, Ariz., and sent it to the American Orthodox Institute -- which published the article in late September on its Web site.

Bishops, priests and laypeople -- some pleased, some furious -- immediately began forwarding Peck's article from one end of Orthodox cyberspace to the other. I received some of these urgent e-mails, since I am an Orthodox convert whose name is on several public Web sites.

While his article addressed several hot-button topics -- from fundraising to sexual ethics -- Peck said it was clear which theme caused the firestorm.

"The notion that traditionally Orthodox ethnic groups (the group of 'our people' we hear so much about from our primates and hierarchs) are going to populate the ranks of the clergy, and therefore, the Church in the future is, frankly, a pipe dream," he wrote. The reality is that many American clergy and laity -- some converts, but many ethnic leaders as well -- refuse to "accept the Church as a club of any kind, or closed circle kaffeeklatsch. No old world embassies will be tolerated for much longer.

"The passing away of the Orthodox Church as ethnic club is already taking place. It will come to fruition in a short 10 years, 15 years in larger parishes."

Church statistics are, as a rule, almost impossible to verify. However, experts think there are 250 million Orthodox believers worldwide -- the second largest Christian flock -- and somewhere between 1.2 million and 5 million worshipping in the 22 ethnic jurisdictions in North America. That huge statistical gap is crucial.

The problem is that Orthodoxy is experiencing two conflicting trends in America. Some parishes and missions are growing, primarily due to an influx of converts -- especially evangelicals -- from other churches. Meanwhile, many larger congregations are getting older, while watching the children and grandchildren of their ethnic founders assimilate.

Thus, many Orthodox leaders are excited about the future. Others are just as frustrated about their problems in the here and now.

Thriving American parishes, said Peck, are finding ways to blend some of the traditions of the old world with strong efforts to build churches that welcome newcomers, whether they are converts or the so-called ethnic "reverts" who rediscover the church traditions of earlier generations.

The best place to see the big picture, he said, is in America's Orthodox seminaries. One study found that nearly half of the future priests are converts and that percentage is sure to be higher in the evangelistic churches that emphasize worship and education in English.

"When I talk about the churches of the future, I'm not talking about churches without ethnic roots," said Peck. "What I'm talking about are churches in which there are no barriers to prevent people from working and living and worshipping together. It doesn't matter whether the people inside are Greek or Hispanic or Arab or Asian or Russian or Polynesian or anything else.

"All of these people are supposed to be in our churches, together, if we are going to get serious about building Orthodoxy in America. It's no longer enough to have folk dancing and big ethnic festivals. Those days are over."
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Study Finds More Orthodox Converts

By Nicole Neroulias, Religion News Service

A new study of Orthodox Christians in America has found a larger-than-expected number of converts, mostly from Roman Catholic and evangelical Protestant backgrounds.

The report, released by the Patriarch Athenagoras Orthodox Institute in Berkeley, Calif., surveyed 1,000 members of Greek Orthodox or Orthodox Church in America congregations, which represent about 60% of America's estimated 1.2 million Orthodox Christians.

Although Orthodox churches were historically immigrant communities, the study found that nine out of 10 parishioners are now American-born. Thousands of members had converted to the faith as adults: 29% of Greek Orthodox are converts, as are 51% of the OCA.

"I would not have expected this many," said Alexei Krindatch, the Orthodox Institute's
research director. "My sense was that in Greek Orthodox, it would be around 15%, and OCA maybe one-third."The study also found unexpectedly high numbers of converts among clergy - 56% in the OCA, 14% in the Greek Orthodox church. In both cases, the higher OCA numbers reflect that group's use of English in its worship services, he added.

These findings could mean that Orthodox churches are growing in America, assuming there aren't equal or greater numbers of Orthodox Christians leaving for other faiths; researchers won't know until they conduct a 2010 membership census. The findings, however, indicate that other Christians are increasingly seeking a more traditional worship experience, Krindatch said.

"In the case of Roman Catholics, those are mainly people who are not quite happy with the reforms of the Second Vatican Council; they are looking for the Catholic Church as it used to be in the past," he said. "In the case of evangelical Christians, those are people who have very strong personal beliefs, they know the Bible very well, they are frequent churchgoers, and eventually they want to join an established church with deep, historical roots."

Compared to a 2005 study of American Catholics, the survey found more Orthodox Christians responding that they could not imagine belonging to another faith group, and fewer agreeing that how a person lives is more important than his or her religious affiliation.

"In all possible measures, belonging to a church is more important to Orthodox than Catholics," Krindatch said.

The study's other findings showed a majority of Orthodox Christians would support allowing married bishops, but not female priests. They also want their clergy to work with their Catholic and Protestant counterparts to coordinate a common date for Easter, which typically falls several weeks later for the Orthodox due to their use of an older liturgical calendar.
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Thursday, October 23, 2008

Worker Priests

Several weeks ago Huw had a post on his blog about Tent Maker Clergy. I was going to comment and then it got lost in all of the other posts I was working on. So here goes.

As church attendance dwindles and the cash in the coffers gets less and less is it time for the clergy to look for other employment? We do not become clergy to make money in fact most of us know that we will be faced with a life of struggle when it comes to money. I am lucky in some ways because I am single and do not have to provide for a family and my parish has a house for me to live in. Some are not as lucky as I am. Many parishes are selling their parish house, or rectory, to save money. Many clergy prefer not to live in the parish house so they can build up equity for the future. Are we coming to a time in the church when the full-time clergy is a thing of the past? Are we coming to a time when we have one priest serving many parishes. That is the case in many Roman Catholic Diocese and many Anglican churches as well.

Here in the village we have three orthodox church, in a town of around 14,000 mind you. The combined membership is somewhere around 150 people. I am the only full-time priest here in the village. One is retired and lives on the other side of the state and the other one lives and teaches in another town about 30 minutes away. We all face the same problems of lack of people and old buildings and no money. We have tried, without success, to merge the parishes but the people do not want to hear about it.

So what do clergy do? How many parishes out there are left that can support a full-time clergy and have the clergy live above the poverty rate? Is it time for us to start to look for part-time work outside of the church to make ends meet. In my diocese for example we have to pay for our own seminary education, not the same in all orthodox diocese by the way. We have no retirement benefits, and no job security. If the folks here decide they don't like me they could turf me out tomorrow and not only to I loose my job but my home as well.

There was a tradition in the church years back of Worker Priests. Perhaps it is time for us to get out there in the workforce, not a good time to do that either. But what does it do to the church? Can we build a church if we are not here? Can the church survive with a part-time clergy? These are questions that we need to ask, and we need to find answers too as well.
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Alternative Worship

Last night we celebrated the feast of St. James with the Liturgy of St James. A beautiful Liturgy and I am sorry we do not use this one more often then the one time a year. But we did have about 25 people in attendance, it was a truly blessed evening. In an upcoming episode of Facing East Podcast, Fr. Greg and I talk about the Liturgy of St. James, and other stuff. Look for that soon.

I have been posting about things we can do to make liturgy a little accessible to our people and as usual this meets with some concern. I like all of the give and take that has been going on here on the blog, and much to my surprise everyone has been very nice to each other. I guess we can disagree and still be civil to each other.

Whilst reading the blogs this morning I came across this article from the New York Time about and Episcopal Church in Connecticut starting an alternative Sunday Evening Service. Now, I don't think that this exact style would work in an Orthodox Church but a Sunday evening Liturgy might be a good idea. Give this a read and comment here.

The question for today is this: Can we celebrate the Liturgy without singing? I mean can we have a "low mass" for lack of a better term. Let's say we have a Sunday Evening Liturgy or a Saturday evening Liturgy, and by Liturgy I mean Eucharistic Liturgy. Can we celebrate this liturgy spoken and not sung? Now if you are going to say something about the canons do include a reference to the canon you speak of, and remember these are for guidance and not in the Western sense of the law.

Let the comments fly!
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Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Blogging Bishop

I have just learned that His Grace Bishop Savas of Troas, who i s the Chancellor of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese in America is blogging. He is presently on sabbatical and he is in Florence Italy. I believe he is the first Orthodox Bishop to blog.

Go and welcome His Grace to the world of blogging!
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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Orthodox New Media Conference

To all those of you reading this who blog or podcast, Fr Greg and I are thinking of putting together an Orthodox New Media Conference late summer or early fall 2009 somewhere in the northeast.

The idea would be to bring together all of those who are working with new media in one room and have a discussion and some workshops and such. It would also be a chance for readers and listeners to come and meet the people behind the new media. Just an idea right now and we are looking for some partners to join us in this task. Would there be any interest? If so leave me a comment.
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Everything Must Change Part 2

Well the response was great to the last post, 15 comments so far and the discussion continues. I would like to go out a limb, okay that is usually where I am anyway, but here I am again on this limb. What do folks think about an alternative worship experience? Let me define what I am thinking.

Sunday is the traditional day that worship takes place in Christian Churches around the globe. Some Evangelical Church have mid week services and some have Sunday evening services. Many Catholic Churches are experimenting with Sunday evening Masses and of course they have mass during the week. What would you think of offering a Divine Liturgy on Saturday night or making a Divine Liturgy available during the week for folks who can't come on Sunday for various reasons? Some people have to work on Sundays and so they cannot make it to church but would love to come. Some younger people who like to go out on Saturday night, have trouble getting up on Sunday morning. Now I know we should not make excuses for people but why not make church more accessible to them? This would not replace the present Sunday morning Liturgy as the main liturgy of the week.

Let the comments begin!
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Monday, October 20, 2008

Everything Must Change

If we start with the premise that we cannot change anything about the Liturgy in the Orthodox Church, then what else can we change to keep religion relevant in the minds and hearts of the people?

I am asking this as pastor of a parish that is loosing members left and right and has no youth in the parish save two. We have many members but most do not come to church on a regular basis. I think everyone is dealing with the same thing.

I mentioned in an earlier post the Emmanuel Orthodox Church. How is it they can attract 100's of people to worship and the rest of us struggle to get 30 on Sunday. Is it location? Is it the music, or lack there of? Is it the preaching, or lack there of? Is it the people and the way they act when visitors come? Do our members invite people to come to church or do we like to keep things a secret?

What can we change about how we do church to change all of this? How do we make Orthodoxy more than an ethnic church and a church that is available to the masses? Let's try and have a civil discussion about all of this. I will start by saying the language issue is dead so let us not even speak of that.
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Shepherd of Souls 32

Episode 32 of Shepherd of Souls is now online. In this episode we continue the tour of St. Michael Orthodox Church in Southbridge, Massachusetts.

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Sunday, October 19, 2008

Blogging Parishioners

Yet another St. Mike's parishioner has entered the world of blogging. Welcome Johnny G to the fray and do visit his blog.
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Saturday, October 18, 2008

Confession

Last night I had the rare opportunity, well rare for an orthodox priest anyway, of hearing first confessions. Emmanuel Orthodox Church in Warren Massachusetts will be received into Holy Orthodox this very morning by Chrismation. About 100 people will be welcomed home and I think I heard most of the confessions last night.

What makes this so special? Well I heard confessions from people who had not been to confession in 35 years and also people who had never had a sacramental confession before. People confessed sins that they had been carrying around with them for most of their live and were finally able to put words to what they were feeling. These were not your typical five minutes before liturgy confessions and I was honored to be asked to participate.

The interesting thing about Emmanuel is that it is a Western Rite Parish. Okay before you liturgical purists out there jump all over me rest assured that the Western Rite is as canonical as the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, St. Basil, St. James, or any of the other liturgies that we presently use in the Orthodox Church. Liturgy has been around for a long time and did not always look like what we are used too on Sunday morning.

The ritual is actually very beautiful and very simple. I was surprised at how simple it was. No triple litanies, just simple get to it kind of ritual.

Bless me, Father, for I have sinned.

May the Lord be in thy heart and upon thy lips, that thou mayest worthily confess all thy sins; In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

I confess to God Almighty, to all the Saints, and to you, Father, that I have sinned very much in thought, word, deed, and omission, by my own great fault. Since my last confession, which was (how long ago), when I received absolution and performed my penance, I have committed there sins: (get down to it). For these and all my other sins which I cannot remember, I am very sorry. I will try to do better, and I humbly ask pardon of God; and of you, Father, penance, advice, and absolution.

Our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath left power to His Church to absolve all sinners who truly repent and believe in Him, of His great mercy forgive three thine offenses; And by His authority committed to me, I absolve three from all thy sins, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

Penance was new to me. Well not new in the sense of doing penance, I grew up Roman Catholic, but the giving of penance. I don't think there is a proscription against the giving of penance in the Orthodox Church but it just seems that it is not done. If anyone of the readers has any other information this please leave me some comments. I need to research further this concept of penance in the Orthodox Church.

This was such a wonderful event and I was honored to be part of it. People actually confessed their actual sins, stuff they have been carrying around for years and in most cases while the absolution prayer was being recited, they came to tears, tears of joy that they were once and for all forgiven of all that stuff they had been carrying around for year.

One older woman, she had to be in her late 70's confessed something from when she was a teenager. She had never confessed it before and had been carry this around with her all those years. She told me she felt like a great weight had been lifted from her shoulders. Praise God!

We do not know how lucky were are to belong to a church with sacramental confession. It is too bad more people do not partake of this on a regular basis. Yours truly included. If you are from St. Mike's prepare to hear more about this tomorrow.
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Monday, October 13, 2008

The Bishops Have Spoken, Sort of

So all of the Orthodox Patriarchs, or their representatives have been meeting at the Phanar in Istanbul, Turkey. The heads of 14 Orthodox Churches were in attendance. They commented twice in their statement about the current world financial crisis. Well I guess it is a response, it is pretty lame if you ask me. I will put the two quotes below and a link to the entire document so you can read for yourself.
8. The gap between rich and poor is growing dramatically due to the financial crisis, usually the result of manic profiteering by economic factors and corrupt financial activity, which, by lacking an anthropological dimension and sensitivity, does not ultimately serve the real needs of mankind. A viable economy is that which combines efficacy with justice and social solidarity.
10. The Orthodox Church believes that technological and economic progress should not lead to the destruction of the environment and the exhaustion of natural resources. Greed to satisfy material desires leads to the impoverishment of the human soul and the environment. We must not forget that the natural riches of theearth are not only man’s property, but primarily God’s creation: “The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof, the world and all who dwell therein” (Ps.23:1). We ought to remember that not only today’s generation, but also future generations are entitled to have a right to the resources of nature, which the Creator has granted us.
I often wonder in cases like this if they have the statement all drawn up before they even meet. That would seem the case here. These bishops are so out of touch with reality! It will take some time to read the statement in it's full measure and comment on it. Here is the link to the entire document.
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Orthodox Delegate Sees Pope's Mission as Duty of Unity

Says Tired Society Demands United Christian Voice

VATICAN CITY, OCT. 12, 2008 (Zenit.org).- A representative of the Orthodox Church who addressed the world Synod of Bishops spoke of the Bishop of Rome as a sign of unity among Christians.

Archimandrite Ignatios Sotiriadis, fraternal delegate from the Orthodox Church of Greece, spoke Saturday to the synod, which is focusing on the Word of God in the life and mission of the Church.

His address brought more applause than any other intervention in the first week of the synod.

"Your Holiness," he said, "our society is tired and sick. It seeks but does not find! It drinks but its thirst is not quenched. Our society demands of us Christians -- Catholics, Orthodox, Protestants, Anglicans -- a common witness, a unified voice. Here lies our responsibility as pastors of the Churches in the 21st Century."

"Here," the Orthodox pastor continued, "is the primary mission of the First Bishop of Christianity, of him who presides in charity, and, above all, of a Pope who is Magister Theologiae: to be the visible and paternal sign of unity and to lead under the guidance of the Holy Spirit and according to Sacred Tradition, with wisdom, humility and dynamism, together with all the bishops of the world, fellow successors of the apostles, all humanity to Christ the redeemer."

"This is the profound desire of those who have the painful longing in their heart for the undivided Church, 'Una, Sancta, Catholica et Apostolica,'" he concluded. "But it is also the desire of those who, again today, in a world without Christ, fervently, but also with filial trust and faith, repeat the words of the apostles: 'Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life!'"
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Sunday, October 12, 2008

Weekend Round Up

I am dong this a little early this week because I am leaving right after liturgy today to head to my parents house. They have been on a cruise for the last 10 days and I am going to open the house and turn on the heat for them. I hear the cruise was nice but there was some kind of bug going around so everyday people were getting sick. Anyway they are on their way home and will arrive back in Quincy sometime after 6pm.

As some of you may know I was on the local radio station on Friday. My Shepherd of Souls program is heard on this station on Sunday mornings at 8:30 but the station manager invited me on to do the morning show with him. It was great fun and it looks like I am going to be invited back each Friday morning. More on this when I find out what is going on. It was an early start and for any of you who know me you know I am really not an early morning person.

After the radio time I went off to the Fire House for lunch with guys. I like to spend time on Fridays with them to see what is going on in their lives and how they are coping with different things. Ministry outside the walls can be difficult and it is not every ones cup of tea but I like it and I look forward to it.

Yesterday (Saturday) was spent doing laundry and getting the bulletin finished and working on the sermon for Sunday. Something I should be doing right now. Not much else went on. The Red Sox lost the second game but there are five more to go and they come home now for two so we shall see what happens. This is an odd time of year when all four Boston teams, five if you count the Revolution, that's the soccer team we have, are all playing. Very strange to hear the hockey scores at the same time you hear the baseball scores.

So now back to the sermon. I am also uploading the new episode of Shepherd of Souls and other stuff. Multi-tasking this early in the morning.
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The God of Love

All of my readers please read this post I think it hits the nail right on the head. Sphere: Related Content

A Nice Church Story, For a Change

Cardinal William H. O'Connell was never much of a Red Sox fan. Despite presiding over the Archdiocese of Boston during a period when the team won the World Series four times, there's no evidence that he used his free pass to Fenway, and he railed against the playing of baseball on Sundays.

The Rest of the Story
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Saturday, October 11, 2008

Facing East #30

Facing East Podcast Episode 30 is now online. Join us this week as we speak with our friend Huw from Buffalo, New York.

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Thursday, October 09, 2008

Thousands Turn to Online Prayer

Thousands turn to online prayer and advice as financial situationworsens

Posted On : October 9, 2008 1:10 PM
Posted By : WebmasterRelated Categories: ACO EnglandACNS:
http://www.aco.org/acns/news.cfm/2008/10/9/ACNS4533

Web users looking for support during the current financial situationhave boosted traffic to a Church of England website section focusing ondebt advice by over 70 per cent, and increased visitor numbers to theChurch's online prayer page by more than a quarter.

The Matter of Life and Debt website section - containing a new 'debtspiral' feature so visitors can work out if they are one of the manyfamilies who will be seriously affected by the credit crunch, and usefuladvice for those worried about debt - has seen a 71 per cent increase intraffic in recent weeks.

It can be viewed by visiting www.cofe.anglican.org/debt. A new Prayer for the Current Financial Situation has been viewed nearly8,000 times since it was published online in September - increasingtraffic to the popular Prayers for Today section by 28 per cent.

It can be found online at www.cofe.anglican.org/prayers. The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, recently said: "At thistime of international financial turbulence, it is important that theChurch should be offering the opportunity for prayer and reflection."Prayers for Today also contains many other useful contemporary prayers -covering issues such as exam stress, and world peace.

Prayer for the current financial situation

Lord God, we live in disturbing days:
across the world,
prices rise,
debts increase,
banks collapse,
jobs are taken away,
and fragile security is under threat.
Loving God, meet us in our fear and hear our prayer:
be a tower of strength amidst the shifting sands,
and a light in the darkness;
help us receive your gift of peace,
and fix our hearts where true joys are to be found,
in Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
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On the Radio

If you are in the Southbridge or South Central Worcester County area tomorrow (Friday) then tune in to WESO 970AM from 7-9 I will be a guest on the morning show. Who knows what will happen but I am in the hot seat for two hours. Call in if you can.
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Where are Our Bishops?

We are 28 days from a National Presidential Election. The economy has been going down the tubes for the last few weeks. The Dow in going down. And where are our Orthodox Bishops? I have spent a little time looking at the website of SCOBA (The Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in America) and not a statement on the election. Not a statement on the economy. Nothing or bishops are silent. In these times of uncertainty we need to hear from out leaders. We need assurance from them and we need guidance from them. But all we get is silence.

Now I could be wrong and if I am please send me links to their statements and I will post them here for all to read. Bishops we need to hear from you!
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Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Blog Martyr

If anyone thinks discipleship does not have a cost you need to read this story. Rania was from Saudi Arabia, you remember them they are our partners in the Middle East. The ones who helped us overthrow Saddam and the others. Well Rania converted to Christianity and she blogged about it and was then burned to death for her story. I will not tell you anymore I would like you to read it and remember Rania next time the government talks about our friend the Saudis! This just makes me sick.

H/T Tall Skinny Kiwi
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Blogging Parishioners

Well it would seem I have created a monster. I have been blogging for about 2 years and now I have been joined by two of my parishioners. This is great! Please welcome:

Laura - Kiss the Boo Boo

Linda - Convert

To the blogospher! These are two of the hardest working women I have in my church. I am not sure where we would be with out these two. Put them in your feed and read their writings. They write from a perspective of wife and mother and talk about what is going on in their lives. And on occasion they mention me, so that is a bonus.

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Economic Crisis

Well it would seem that the crisis has reached far from our boarders. If anyone still is in need of convincing that we are part of a global economy just look toward Iceland. Today the Government of Iceland has Nationalised some of their banks to protect them from going under. Iceland!

On the upside gas prices have fallen again and there was a rumor that gas could be had for $3.06 per gallon so this is good new but how long will it last. Oil is also coming down bad news for the church we locked in at $3.65 per gallon and I hear it is down to something like $3.40 per gallon oh well that is the chance we take I guess. So we just grin and bear it and hope that all will be well.

Today I awoke to 35f temps outside. Thanks to Laura and John who came by last night to wrap the tender plants in front of the rectory to keep them from freezing. I never think of those things so I am glad someone is. So it looks like the cold weather is here. I don't mind telling you I am glad. I like summer but I cannot take the humidity. It just takes all my strength away.

Today I am off to interview a priest who is on his way into the Orthodox Church with his entire congregation. They are becoming part of the Western Rite of the Antiochian Archdiocese. Fr. Ken and his congregation have been working for more than a year to become Orthodox. I will have the honor of helping to hear confessions next week prior to the Chrismation. I will also attend their ordinations. Big day! Listen to Shepherd of Souls this weekend for the interview. It might end up in two parts depending on how long winded we both get.

So for now stay warm!
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Monday, October 06, 2008

Weekend Round Up

For a small parish we are very busy!

This weekend saw our Annual Yard Sale and Harvest Bake Sale. The ladies of the parish were very busy and as usual they did an amazing job. For a small group of people they never cease to amaze me of what they are able to pull off. For my part all I did was show up and talk with people and eat some food. The life of a priest is difficult but I embrace the difficulty!

If you follow me on twitter you have heard me speak of the Lake House. Well the Lake House is a trailer that I purchased a few years back as my retreat or monastery if you will. My plan was to spend my days off there in prayer and meditation. Well it never really seemed to work out that way so I sold it and Saturday I had to clean all the stuff out of it. It was sad to see it go but I needed to make a break. It was getting expensive to keep it on the site I had it on so I had to say goodbye. Goodbye is never easy but it had to be done.

Sunday was the first day that Shepherd of Souls was syndicated. Although I have no idea how many people listen on the three radio stations it is on I feel that this ministry is important to reach people. Liturgy went well and I have posted my homily from the day. After Church coffee hour. This has become a very important ministry here at the church. In days gone by everyone lived within walking distance of the church. Well that is no longer the case so coffee hour is the time for people to check in with each other and see how things are going. It also gives me time to talk with the parishioners and see what is up in their life. After that was done I had to go out to the lake to meet the guy who bought the lake house. Then back to the rectory for some R&R. I made a Highland Hot Pot for supper and I will post the recipe latter on. I have made this before and it was good. Very good on a cold day. It is soup and stew season and I love it. Time to cook with root veggies again.

This week we begin a lecture series on what the church teaches on certain social issues of the day in advance of the presidential election next month. I plan to record the sessions and post them but we shall see how that goes. I am looking forward to this class but it means more work for me. That's okay I enjoy it. I am still part of the book club although I only did one past from the reading assignment. I will get better I hope.

The rest of the week is filled with meeting and podcasting and interviewing people for up coming episodes. For now it's time to pray and read a little.
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19th Sunday After Pentecost

2 Corinthians 6:1-10
Luke 6:31-36

Inner Poverty

Last week I spoke about greed and why we must avoid it at all costs. Greed is a sin plain and simple and leads to much destruction as we have seen in these past weeks.Yesterday on the Western Church Calendar was the feast day of St. Francis of Assisi. I will admit that St. Francis is still to this day one of my favorite saints on either calendar. The fact that he is not listed among the saints on the Orthodox Calendar should not detract us from reading about his life and what he had to say and what he still has to say to us today. St. Francis has much to say to us especially in these days.I am sure we all know the story. Francis was born to a very wealthy family in Italy and was destined for greatness. At one point in his life he had what has been described as a mystical experience and heard the voice of God tell him to rebuild his church. Francis took this very literally and began to rebuild the church of San Damiano located just outside his village. Well his father was not happy about this at all. In the story we are told of Francis standing in the middle of the town with all the inhabitants of the town gathered around. Francis denounces his inheritance and literally strips himself bare and walks out of the town completely naked. In a very real sense he was now listed among the poor of the world for he had no worldly possession. Francis believed that owning possessions took our eyes off of God and His Son Jesus Christ as we would rely on those things for help and not God, who Francis believed, gave us all that we needed. But Francis took this one step further. Francis spoke of something called inner poverty and this is something that I eluded too last week. The emptying of ones self to make room of the mystery of the almighty. A joining together of our will with the will of the Father. A working together if you will. Jesus often speaks about rich people and at one point in his ministry tells his followers that it will be easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter heaven. So will Warren Buffet and Donald Trump be in heaven, I have no clue and it is not our place to judge. What Jesus is speaking of here is interior poverty and not exterior poverty.In Matthews Gospel Chapter five and verse 3 Jesus tells us during the Sermon on the Mount that “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” Poor is not a negative in this sentence in fact it is the opposite it is a positive. Poor in spirit means both the materially poor but also the faithful among God’s people. The poor in spirit, the humbly, the lowly have the heart of the poor and their total dependence upon God. These are truly spiritually rich.

Let me ask you this question. If you woke in the middle on the night and your house was on fire what would you take with you? Pictures, money, checkbook, insurance policy, Icons, Bible? Think about the treasures we have stored up and ask ourselves if we can do without them. Do we rely more on the things of this world for our happiness? How much time do we spend worrying about the future and our financial well being versus the amount of time we spend in prayer giving all that we have, body and soul, to God? If we were to loose everything tomorrow what would happen?Back to St. Francis for a minute. Francis believed that if we had possessions then we would need weapons to guard them. We would need to protect the things of our life from someone stealing them. How are we with guarding the things of our souls? What weapons do we have to guard against the theft of our souls, of our spirits, of our very lives, not our physical lives, but our spiritual lives?

I am not a gun owner, most of you I am sure are glad to hear that. I believe that in this day and age guns are a necessary evil in our society. But gun owners spend many hours polishing their guns and making sure they work. They oil all of the moving parts and make sure that the bullets are clean and that they know where the gun is so at a moments notice they can run and get it to protect themselves, their families and their stuff. I wonder how much time we spend polishing the weapons of our spirituality? How much time do we spend in prayer, with the word, or just meditation? Most of you work 40 hours plus a week to put food on your table and clothes on your back, and thank God a little something in the tray when it is passed. 40 hours plus a week building up your kingdom here on earth. How much time do we spend building up our kingdom in heaven?

We are now less than a month away from the presidential election. Many of you, me included, spend hours watching the TV news, reading the blogs, and thinking about the next president of the United States. Many of us can name the candidates, their running mates, and where they stand on certain issues. How much time do we spend thinking about the King of Kings and Lord of Lords? How much time do we spend reading his word and thinking about where he stands on the issues of the day? Does what the church teaches on issues influence your vote at all or just slightly? Do we even know what the church thinks and teaches about the issues of the day, do we even care?

Inner poverty is a change, we have heard a lot about change these last few months. Inner poverty is a new way to think about what we do and how we do it. Inner poverty is a surrendering of that part of our life that should belong to Jesus. It is turning over that part of ourselves to the other that I spoke about last week. It is a change in how we do things and how we act and how we live our very lives. It is a turning toward God and away from the world.

We soon will be entering the liturgical season of Advent. Advent is a time of preparation. A preparation for the birth of the Christ Child. It is also a time of preparation of our selves for the coming of the Christ Child. A time for us to think about what we have done and what we have left undone during the past year. Let us spend those days in true reflection of what it means to be a follower of Jesus and what Jesus is asking us, as his followers, to do with our lives. Let us spend a little more time with Jesus and a little less time worrying about our stuff.

Stand in the square. Strip yourself naked. And turn it all over to Jesus.
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Sunday, October 05, 2008

Religion and Politics

There is an excellent op-ed piece going around about the role religion has taken in this political season. I highly recommend you read it.

Using religion to win votes subverts the Constitution Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, October 04, 2008

My New Picture

I found this picture this morning whilst reading the blogs and had to steal it and post it here. H/T to the Mad Priest for this.


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VP debate draws 70 million viewers

Good for you America! This is great news!

They may be the undercard on the ticket, but Sarah Palin and Joe Biden drew far more viewers for their bout than their running mates did for theirs last week, the largest-ever audience for a vice presidential debate and the second-largest for any debate.

Nielsen Media Research reported yesterday that about 69.9 million people watched Thursday night's debate, compared with about 52.4 million who saw John McCain and Barack Obama go at it Sept. 26. "Although scheduling the debate on a Thursday was obviously a factor in attracting more viewers than the presidential debate last Friday, public curiosity about Sarah Palin clearly drove these higher ratings," Nielsen said.

The viewership figure equaled the second George H. W. Bush-Bill Clinton-Ross Perot presidential debate in 1992, and was exceeded only by the Jimmy Carter-Ronald Reagan debate in 1980 that drew 80.6 million viewers. The audience smashed the previous record for most-watched vice presidential face-off: Bush vs. Geraldine Ferraro in 1984 with 56.7 million viewers.

The 2004 version between Dick Cheney and John Edwards, for comparison, drew 43.6 million.

PBS, which does its ratings separately, said an estimated 3.5 million viewers watched its debate coverage, compared with 2.6 million last week.
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O.J. Simpson found guilty in Vegas case

The odd thing about this case is that it was 13 years ago today that he was acquitted of the charge of killing his wife and her friend. I guess justice takes time. Watch out for Bubba in the poky O.J.

The Story
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Mass. may seek a US loan as credit markets dry up

So now it begins! I guess if we are going to bail out Wall Street we are going to have to bail out everyone. Where can I get an application?

State Treasurer Timothy P. Cahill this week approached the US Treasury and the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston about lending Massachusetts money under the same extraordinary terms the government is giving banks and Wall Street firms during this financial crisis.

The request was prompted by the state's inability to borrow from the short-term debt markets because the financial turmoil has essentially caused credit markets to stop lending or charge prohibitive rates. Earlier this week, Cahill's office shelved a $750 million debt offering because there were no buyers for state or municipal debt, he said. He did say how much the state might want to borrow from the Fed.

The Rest of the Story
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Friday, October 03, 2008

Question from a Reader

This reader has been looking for an answer to his question for sometime now. Let's see if we can help him. I was unable to think of anything. Perhaps one of my serious readers can answer for him.
I have been reading my way through what could loosley be called the "Canon" of Catholic fiction . Authors like Flannery O'Connor, Evelyn Waugh, Walker Percy, Graham Greene, George Bernanos, Francois Mauriac, Ron Hanson, etc., etc., etc.

I guess I use the word "Catholic" authors (although the authors themselves didn't want to be typecast), as authors who wore their faith on their sleeve, so to speak, either implicitly or explicitly, in their writing.

I was wondering if you were aware of any fiction authors who wear their Orthodox Christian spirituality on their sleeve in the same way as the authors listed above.

There seems to be an endless source of Orthodox non-fiction, but a dearth of Orthodox influenced fiction.

The best I have been able to come up with (and their orthodoxy and commitment to their faith varies from book to book) are authors like Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Nickolay Gogol, Nickolay Leskov, Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, and Nikos Kazantzakis.

Can you make any suggestions to expand that list of authors whose Orthodoxy shines through in their writing (with available English translations)?
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House Votes Today

The plan from Washington moves to the House of Representatives for a vote today. The Speaker of the House has said she will only bring it to a vote if the votes are there to pass it. Not a bad plan if you ask me since the last time it failed to stock market dropped like a stone. Also good business to do this on Friday to give the markets the weekend to settle down before trading resumes on Monday.

We see another bank deal gone sour and another bank stepping in without a bailout from the Feds. I think if we give it time things will correct themselves all on their own without the Feds getting involved.

Unemployment figures are due out today as well and that does not look good. Looks like we are going to be at an all time high. Well simples times will be a head we just need to keep our wits and I think we will be fine. Live within your means and all will be well. Remember greed is a sin!
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Debate Follow-up

So I watched the entire thing and my statement about it not changing any minds I think holds true. I am not sure how Palin's folksy way will play with the mainstream sometimes she comes off as not really having a clue. They both did a good job and did a good job a dodging the questions they really did not like. They did look at each other and engage each other in contrast to what was done last week.

The independent bipartisan Factcheck.org has done some fact checking on the debate last night. Seems they both were doing some... hmmm what shall I call it... exaggerating of the positions of themselves and the other guy. Be sure to read it here.

So now we move toward the top of the ticket debate on Tuesday night. Less then a month to go before it is all over, well for this year anyway.
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Thursday, October 02, 2008

Debate

The debate is on right now. We shall see what happens. I think most people will watch but I am not sure how many minds will change because of this. Palin needs this much more than Biden does so good luck to both of them I say. More on this on the morrow.
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Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Facing East Podcast #29

Episode #29 is now online. In this episode we continue our discussion of what we do to relax. Join us for another road trip.

PODCAST
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