Thursday, April 30, 2009

Eastern Christian New Media Awards

Nominations are now open and if you can find it in your heart to nominate this blog, and you can nominate it many times if you like, just click here and make it so.

I will let you know when the voting starts.
Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

The Mental Murder of Torture

For some time now I have been thinking about this torture thing that everyone is talking about. How does this effect all of us and should we be concerned about it. Yesterday I posted a poll for my daily radio show about waterboarding. The results were not surprising to me but a little disturbing none the less. A vast majority of the respondents believe that it is not torture to waterboard someone.

So I came across this article on the First Things Blog by Russell E. Saltzman and he has helped my clarify my thinking on this position. Right in the center of the article the author makes this statement:

I’ve been trying, like many Americas, to think this thing through. There is the altogether practical question: Did torture help us? Did it make America safer? Was the information really good, helpful, in thwarting terrorists? Did it actually in fact spoil pending plots? Frankly, the evidence is mixed.

But I really don’t care. Whether torture “worked” or not as an interrogative tactic is far from the main question. I’m a pastor. I think as a pastor, which is to say as a parish theologian. I don’t care if these guys shrieked like little girls on the playground and blubbered out plots for everything from the St. Valentine’s Day Massacre to knocking over Bagdad candy stores as juvenile delinquents. Torture is morally wrong. It is morally wrong, theologically speaking, because it is an attack upon the imago Dei, upon the image of God inherent to every human life.

Now, I’m not so dumb or so liberal that I can’t understand and remember and share the anger the September 11 attack produced in America, nor was I the least bit hesitant in supporting the studied determination of making sure that nothing like it ever happens again. But if there is anyone suggesting the American homeland is safer today for having abandoned the ordinary principles of humane treatment for prisoners in American custody, then he’s a moral midget. Torture is not what Americans do. Not if we still have some lingering respect for the rights with which God endows humanity.

The important phrase in this entire discussion is the image of God. That is what it all boils down too. As Christians we cannot stand for anything that diminishes the image of God in one of his creations. No matter who, or what that person is we cannot allow this to happen. Any torture is a moral outrage and we need to stand up for those who cannot stand up for themselves.

This will take many hours of thought and prayer and discussion but it is a discussion that we need to have.
Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Thomas Sunday

Though the doors were shut at the dwelling where the disciples were gathered for fear of the Jews on the evening of the Sunday after the Passover, our Saviour wondrously entered and stood in their midst, and greeted them with His customary words, "Peace be unto you." Then He showed unto them His hands and feet and side; furthermore, in their presence, He took some fish and a honeycomb and ate before them, and thus assured them of His bodily Resurrection. But Thomas, who was not then present with the others, did not believe their testimony concerning Christ's Resurrection, but said in a decisive manner, "Except I shall see in His hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into His side, I will not believe." Wherefore after eight days, that is, on this day, when the disciples were again gathered together and Thomas was with them, the Lord Jesus came while the doors were shut, as He did formerly. Standing in their midst, He said, "Peace be unto you"; then He said to Thomas, "Bring hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and bring hither thy hand, and thrust it into My side: and be not unbelieving, but believing."

And Thomas, beholding and examining carefully the hands and side of the Master, cried out with faith, "My Lord and my God." Thus he clearly proclaimed the two natures - human and divine - of the God-man (Luke 24:36-49; John 20:19-29).

This day is called Antipascha (meaning "in the stead of Pascha," not "in opposition to Pascha") because with this day, the first Sunday after Pascha, the Church consecrates every Sunday of the year to the commemoration of Pascha, that is, the Resurrection.
Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, April 25, 2009

Earthquake shakes parts of Bulgaria, Romania

Let us pray to the Lord! Lord have mercy!

An earthquake of about 5.3 on the Richter scale shook northern Bulgaria and parts of Romania at about 8.20pm on April 25 2009.

Initial reports from seismologists said that the epicentre was in the region of Vrancha mountain in Romania, about 145km north east of Bucharest and about 400km from Sofia, with the quake emanating from a depth of about 114km.

Bulgarian National Television (BNT) said that the quake was felt in the Bulgarian cities and towns of Pleven, Varna, Dobrich, Svishtov and Belene. Other Bulgarian-language media said that residents of Rousse, on the Danube bordering Romania, felt the quake "strongly" and some fled high-rise flats.

While in a number of the cities in Bulgaria and Romania that felt the quake, people left their homes to stand in the streets outside, initially there were no reports of serious injuries or damage.

Svishtov residents returned inside after about an hour. The town has vivid memories of 1977, when it was among the places hardest hit by an earthquake in which more than 100 people in the town died, among the more than 1500 Bulgarians and Romanians reported killed at the time by the quake, which also destroyed more than 8000 buildings.

A resident of a Bucharest, severely shaken by the quake told BNT by telephone that people had been frightened at the time of the incident, but calm had returned.
Sphere: Related Content

Easter Week

Well blogging has been light all week as I try to recover from Holy Week. It was a great week here at St. Michael's and I think the week after Holy week is busier than Holy Week mostly because of all of the things we let go that week.

The weather on Sunday was great and I broke with my usual tradition and went to Bourne, Massachusetts for a concert put on by the Scottish Association that I belong to. It was nice but a long drive down (2 hours) and a long drive back (2 hours) made for a long day. I was back about 8:30 and promptly fell asleep as 4:30 comes early.

The radio show continues to go along well I think and we have some plans for the future and will be looking to take the show on the road. We have one date already, Saturday, June 6th is Southbridge Fest here in the Village and I will be broadcasting from the Town Common along with several others on that day. I will post more information as that date gets closer. We are also looking at broadcasting from the Brimfield Flee Market coming up in May. This is one of the largest events in Central Massachusetts and draws about 20,000 people over the three days of the event. It is also done in July and September. We will see how the first one goes and then decide if we want to do it all over again. But the show goes well and I continue to learn. If you have not tuned in and you live in the Southbridge area I am on Monday-Friday from 7-9am on WESO 970 am but you can also listen at www.fatherpeterlive.com

On Thursday night we hosted Dave Ramsey and his Town Hall for Hope. This was a historic event as it was the largest Internet simulcast ever with more than 1 million people watching at some 5,000 host sites around the country. Dave Ramsey is a Christian finance guy that has a wonderful radio and TV program and his entire mission is to get us out of debt with very simple advice. The theme of the Town Hall was hope and the hope we need to have in America to get the economy moving. The negativity needs to stop, we need to stop blaming people, and we just need to get moving. "We will be the healing agents of change" he said during the broadcast. I was inspired by this and plan to do more reading and teaching on this so watch this site for more.

Friday the weather was just amazing! This weekend promises to be even better. I spent some time outside getting my new screen house set up. Maybe a little too early but I wanted to get it set up and arranged so I know how it was going to look.

Today I dash off to family in New Hampshire for a little meeting about the New Hampshire Highland Games and our participation this year so that will be fun to see the folks. Long drive but it will be fun. Then back here to get to work for tomorrow. I hope to get some outside work done as well latter in the afternoon and also tomorrow after liturgy.

That's all for now!
Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Oh How They Love One Another

Well another Greek bishop has been heard from. The AOI blog has the text of a speech by the Greek Orthodox Bishop of San Francisco taking on Metr. Jonah of the OCA.
Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Town Hall for Hope

Tomorrow night at the Church we are hosting Dave Ramsey and his Town Hall for Hope. Well we are not actually hosting Dave Ramsey but rather a live stream of the event via the internet. Here is a little bit of information from the Town Hall of Hope website:

Town Hall for Hope is your opportunity to sit down with people in your community for a nationwide town hall meeting led by Dave Ramsey. Thousands of venues across the country will host the event, broadcasting Dave's live presentation. In the opening half hour, Dave will offer straight talk about the economy, recession, foreclosures and more. He'll carefully explain where we've come from, where we are now, and what we should be doing with our money during this time. Then, Dave will spend an hour answering your questions live!

We'll take questions by phone, email, Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and more! Check out our Get Involved page to see all the ways in which you can join in the conversation! And remember, this is a free event!

I feel that as church we need to host events such as this because we are the hope that people need in this economy. As I said in my Easter Sermon only Jesus Christ can being the hope that we need. The government cannot do it for you only Jesus can.

Dave says "The solution to America's economy is to get people to believe again. It's time to connect with families to instill hope and optimism in our economy and our country. We the people are the healing agents."

Who is Dave Ramsey?

Dave Ramsey is a personal money-management expert, an extremely popular national radio personality and best-selling author of The Total Money Makeover. In his latest book, a follow-up of his enormously successful New York Times best-sellers Financial Peace and More Than Enough, Ramsey exemplifies his life's work of teaching others how to be financially responsible, so they can acquire enough wealth to take care of loved ones, live prosperously into old age, and give generously to others.

Ramsey knows first-hand what financial peace means in his own life-living a true rags-to-riches-to-rags-to-riches story. By age twenty-six he had established a four-million-dollar real estate portfolio, only to lose it by age thirty. He has since rebuilt his financial life and now devotes himself full-time to helping ordinary people understand the forces behind their financial distress and how to set things right-financially, emotionally and spiritually.

Ramsey offers life-changing financial advice as host of a nationally syndicated radio program, The Dave Ramsey Show, which is heard by nearly four million listeners each week on more than 400 radio stations throughout the United States.

Ramsey is the creator of Financial Peace University(FPU), a 13-week program that helps people dump their debt, get control of their money, and learn new behaviors around money that are founded on commitment and accountability. More than 750,000 families have attended FPU classes at their workplace, church, military installation, local nonprofit organization, community group or Spanish-speaking organization. The average family pays off $5,300 in debt and saves $2,700 in the first 91 days after beginning FPU and is completely out of debt, except for the mortgage, in 18-24 months.

Ramsey created a group of products in an effort to teach children about money before they have a chance to make mistakes. Financial Peace Jr.is an instructional kit designed to help parents teach their young children about working, saving and giving their own money. Through Ramsey's entertaining children's book series, The Super Red Racer, Careless at the Carnival, The Big Birthday Surprise, My Fantastic Field trip, A Special Thank You,and Battle of the Chores, children learn about working, saving, giving, budgeting, integrity and debt.

On October 15, 2007, Ramsey added television host to his title when The Dave Ramsey Show on Fox Business Network debuted nationally.

Ramsey earned his B.S. degree in Finance and Real Estate from the University of Tennessee. A frequent speaker around the country at large-scale live events, Ramsey is a passionate and inspiring presenter who is at ease on both sides of the microphone. More than 600,000 people have attended Ramsey's live events.
Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Earth Day ~ Plant with Purpose

Here is a great video for Earth Day tomorrow. H/T to Brian McLaren


Sphere: Related Content

Romanian Elite from Harvard and MIT Supports Democracy in the Republic of Moldova

By Vasile Muresan

Shortly after the events that occurred in Chisinau, Romanians and Moldavians everywhere started to show their support and partisanship with the people of Moldova. Furthermore several manifestations of protest have been organized abroad. The Romanian communities in the US consequently joined the Romanians from Europe by organizing meetings via internet. The purpose was to bring awareness to the public, and to inform the public opinion with regards to the electoral abuses of the communist regime in Moldova. The meeting organized in Boston has proved to be the most complex and successful manifestation of the Romanians and Moldavians living in the US. The event took place Friday, April 10th at 4 o’clock p.m. in Harvard square and was initiated by the Romanian Students Association of Harvard and MIT. The were over 100 supporters of this great cause, a democratic and free Republic of Moldova. Radu Tarau, the sent-out reporter for Radio Diaspora Online, captured the highlights of the event. Emanuel Stoica and Rares Pamfil, the leaders of the Romanian Student Association of Harvard and MIT took the time to answer the questions addressed by our reporter.

Which is the purpose of this action?

E.S The purpose of this action is supporting the protesters from Chisinau and other cities from Moldova, asking for free elections and for freedom of the press that has suffered tremendously lately. Even if the democratic forces will try to recount the votes in Moldova, it wouldn’t change the situation. The opposing party needs access to the independent and national press which right now is controlled entirely by the governing party. The message of the opposition does not reach the farthest parts of Moldova.

We Need a Stronger Voice

R. P. Not only do we want to gather all the Romanians in the vicinity, we also want to make the American people aware of this political menace and encourage them to take seriously these happenings. I’ve been talking with students from New York and Washington. In Washington at this moment a similar event is taking place. By synchronizing these events we set forth a stronger voice that will say that we are beside the people of Moldova and will reach some media channels of the West, will reinforce that this is not something that can be ignored.

R.T. Will the solution be the organization of new elections or the vote recount?

E.S. The vote recount is not a solution, it’s just part of the process by which the correctness of the election can be verified, it’s a stage, I don’t think that it would solve much. The fraud didn’t happen when counting the votes, but when voting happened. Of course there is no way of proving who they voted for, the people that committed the fraud I mean. By verifying the electoral lists and gathering the fraud cases the most you can prove is that the election process was a fraud. You cannot change the outcome. According to the sociological studies the most important channels in Moldova, and here I am not referring to Chisinau where there is a variety of news in place, are the national tv channel Moldova 1 and a Russian channel. The tv channel Moldova 1 is entirely controlled by the leading party. The news portrays the opposition in a negative way. It is hard to have an accurate image when watching Moldova 1.
R.P. The recount of the votes could confirm the victory of the communists during the elections. On the long run we all wish there were a victory of the liberals, of the opposing party. I don’t know if organizing new elections is something doable as long as the West, the O.S.C.E. or other organizations that could say something are not pressuring in this direction.
R.T. The results are absolutely different from what the expectations were?
E.S. After all, all the manifestations are sprouting from this. people have sensed that change has occurred in the Moldavian society, that the majority of the people was not voting for the communist party. When they saw the results they were shocked.

The US and EU Did Not Take a Firm Enough Position

R.T. The US and Europe’s reaction in support of Russia’s position was disappointing
E.S. Indeed the reaction of the West was pale. The were a few European members of the parliament that have commented harshly the situation in Moldova, and it’s good that they did. the events have captured the attention of American newspapers. There have been several articles in New York Times and The Economist referring to the situation in Moldova. After more then 10 years The Republic of Moldova is in the midst of international mass-media.
R.T. I am not sure that US and Europe were in support of Russia’s position, but they didn’t adopt a firm enough position regarding the issues raised by the Moldavian protesters. I think that the fact that the protest was so violent from the get go made possible an ambivalent reaction coming from the West, from the press, and from the politicians of Bruxelles. Maybe if in the following days the events develop calmly more people will participate and the purpose of the protest will be more clear.
R.T I notice that there are participants of other nationalities?
E.S. There are people that found out about the situation in Moldova by reading publications such as New York Times, they came to support us and we appreciate the fact that they came.
R.T. Among Romanians there is a belief that the young Moldavians’ drive to go out in the street was due to the fact that Romania is already a EU member and the solution to their problems would be achievable if united with Romania.
E.S. In Chisinau, and generally in Moldova, the youth looks toward Romania and has high expectations such as citizenship and I hope that Romania will step forward regarding this matter. There are signs that the situation will change and it won’t be fabricated the way it has been until now. The unification with Romania is the natural step. Maybe is not best suited to say that everybody wants this in Romania and Moldova, it would not be true to say it. It is an ideal to consider, and it would have to be done in a thoughtful and careful way. What is imperative now is something else. The government wants to blame the opposition of the above mentioned saying that they have a state that they are trying to strengthen and some young people manipulated are coming from outside and trying to demolish what was built.
R.T. Which will be the result of the events in Chisinau?
E.S. I hope that the elections will be held again and that the opposition will have success with the main media channels in Moldova. These are two pragmatic issues which hopefully will be finalized. I do believe that Romania will have to act tactfully and in a smart way because so far it is unclear whether Romania has a strategy regarding this situation.

Harvard Law School Student Joining the Moldavian Cause

R.T. What made you participate and support a cause that has nothing to do with you country?
Bakhtiar Hajyev: I think it is mine because I share the same values with the courageous people who stood up for freedom and democracy in Moldova. I also believe that as all other free nations, our nations, the nations of post-soviet countries (Moldova and Azerbaijan) also deserve democracy and a in free society, with free elections and freedom of opinion. I was surprised when I heard about this events both in Moldova and around the world and I’ve decided to come and support democracy and democratic values.
R. T. Surprised about the turnout?
B. H. Surprised about the turnout here, surprised about the turnout in Moldova, I was surprised about the reaction in Moldova because I was in Moldova three years ago and my first impression was that Moldova will be the last post-soviet country to stand up for democracy but I was surprised positively that they the stood up before other nations.
R.T. You would think that communism is something outdated how come is still hanging on in places like Moldova?
B.H. I think it is part of the geo-political game. Sooner or later these nations will express their freedom and free will and they will gain their democracy.
R.T Romania and Moldova, two countries with the same language and the same flag, do you think that at some point what happened to Germany will happen to Romania and Moldova?
B.H. When I was in Moldova three years ago I met the Moldavian president Vladimir Voronin and My impression was not negative. When I talked to students in Moldova their reaction was that they had to be united with Romania. After this recent protest in Moldova I contacted my friends to check whether they are safe or not and there was a comment that we Moldavians are Romanians occupied by Russians. Again, it is up to the Moldavians and the Romanians if they decide to unite that can happen if not it is again their choice. But they have to have a choice to make a choice.

Source: www.radiodiasporaonline.com
Sphere: Related Content

Tony Blair Faith Foundation

Today I was honored by being able to participate in a press conference call with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair as he announced 30 fellows for his program to aid in the eradication of malaria in Africa.

The Tony Blair Faith Foundation, working in partnership with the Interfaith Youth Core, is delighted to announce the ten exceptional young people who have been selected in the UK to take part in the young leadership programme which has been established to bring people of different faiths together to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, and in particular, the scourge of malaria.

Among those selected are Amherst college student Rebecca Oyen, 22, from Amshurst, Harvard Student Miranda Rosenberg, 21, Brandeis University student Benjamin Bechtolsheim, 21 and student Maya Smith, 21 all from Boston.

The process of selection was a long one and the Faith Acts Fellows will spend the next 10 months in training and then will be sent our in pairs to work in the African region although at this time the actual assignments have not been announced.

Candidates must have the potential to become accomplished leaders, and be able to demonstrate a firm commitment to work for justice in their own faith community. They will need to be able to commit a year of their life to this work as MDG ambassador, ten months of which will be hard work, travel, workshops, speaking engagements, presentations in a well-planned project devised by them in conjunction with the IFYC. They will receive a basic stipend, insurance cover and health care provision.

Candidates selected will work in interfaith pairs in their own faith communities based in host organisations in their countries. Inspired by their different religious traditions, they will motivate and equip young people in congregations, schools and university religious student groups to lead their faith communities in spreading awareness of the MDG challenge, raising life-saving funds for the fight against deaths from malaria and promoting a new inter-religious dialogue of life and action.

Malaria kills a child in Africa every thirty seconds. Yet it is entirely preventable. Places of worship are present in every village in every part of Africa, forming effective networks in practical ways to reach people in need everywhere. The Faiths Act Fellows will galvanise faith communities in the developed world to support those in Africa, and demonstrate that if faiths work together, they can do even more than what has been achieved apart.

The work of the Blair Foundation is in part of a response to the Millennium Development Goals.
Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Why Does This Make Me Mad

Christ is Risen!

After almost five years in the priesthood I am not sure why this still makes my blood boil. I read several blogs each day and also have my google news reader set to search for certain topics like, orthodox, Romania, Spirituality, etc. In the feed this morning was this headline:

Preparing for Pascha: All ages help to ready church for Greek Easter

The question I have was last Sunday Roman Catholic Easter? Why is it the journalists cannot seem to understand that there are others out here in this big world that are Orthodox that are not Greek?

Having said that it is a very nice article and quotes my friend Fr. Angelo so all and all not a bad look at what we do. I am glad we got some ink since none of the papers around here saw fit to publish anything about the fact that today we celebrate Christ Rising from the dead. Perhaps if someone actually rose form the dead last night we would have gotten some ink.
Oh well, off we go... CHRIST IS RISEN
Sphere: Related Content

Christ is Risen


Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, April 18, 2009

Truths Behind the Tea Parties

Steve Chapman
April 19, 2009

The banking collapse and the economic meltdown have prompted many Americans to turn to the federal government as indispensable savior, telling Congress and the president: We hope you can fix it; we want you to do whatever is necessary to fix it; and we don't care what it costs.

That was not the sentiment in evidence at the tea-party protests held on Tax Day.

There, the message was one of great skepticism about the efficacy of the government's remedies and great apprehension about the expense (along with some of the extremist lunacy that accompanies any mass movement). The scale of the federal response to the crises has come as a frightening surprise to many Americans, who suspect the cure will be worse, and less transitory, than the disease.

Since September, a federal budget that was already growing steadily has accelerated out of control. The ride began in the winter of 2008, when Congress and President George W. Bush agreed on a fiscal stimulus package of $170 billion in tax rebates and incentives. It picked up speed in the fall, when the Treasury spent $85 billion to take over insurance giant American International Group Inc. and Congress approved $700 billion to rescue failing financial institutions.

The Rest of the Story
Sphere: Related Content

Great & Holy Saturday

On Saturday, the high priests and Pharisees gathered together before Pilate and asked him to have Jesus' tomb sealed until the third day; because, as those enemies of God said, "We suspect that His disciples will come and steal His buried body by night, and then proclaim to the people that His resurrection is true, as that deceiver Himself foretold while He was yet alive; and then the last deception shall be worse than the first." After they had said these things to Pilate and received his permission, they went and sealed the tomb, and assigned a watch for security, that is, guards from among the soldiers under the supervision of the high priests (Matt. 27:62-66). While commemorating the entombment of the holy Body of our Lord today, we also celebrate His dread descent with His soul, whereby He destroyed the gates and bars of Hades, and made His light to shine where only darkness had reigned (Job 3 8 : 17; Esaias 49:9; 1 Peter 3:18-20); death was put to death, Hades was stripped of all its captives, our first parents and all the righteous who died from the beginning of time ran to Him Whom they had awaited, and the holy angelic orders glorified God for the restoration of our fallen race.
Sphere: Related Content
† D A N I E L
BY THE WILL OF GOD ARCHBISHOP OF BUCHAREST
METROPOLITAN OF MUNTENIA AND DOBRUDGEA
LOCUM TENENS OF CAESAREA OF CAPPADOCHIA
AND PATRIARCH OF THE ROMANIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH

TO THE CLERGY, MONKS, NUNS
AND BELOVED FAITHFUL OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF BUCHAREST

GRACE, MERCY AND PEACE FROM CHRIST, OUR LORD, AND FATHERLY BLESSINGS FROM US

„And I will be with you always, till the end of time” (Matthew 28: 20)

Fathers and monks, Beloved brothers and sisters in the Lord,

(…) After his resurrection from the dead, Jesus Christ, our Lord, ap-peared, for forty days long, from Easter till Ascension, several times in several places. First of all, He was seen by the women of myrrh, then by his disciples and by several people whom He convinced of the truth of His Resur-rection, teaching them: “about the King-dom of God” (cf. Matthew 28, Mark 16, Luke 24; John 20-21), Acts (1,3) and a few writings of Saint Paul the Apostle (cf. I Corinthians 15:6).

Saint Evangelist Matthew shows us that after his Resurrection from the dead, Christ-the Lord appeared to his disciples in Galilee “at the hill where Jesus had told them to go” (Mathew 28:18-20) and told them: “I have been given all authority in heaven and on earth. Go, then, to all peoples every-where and make them my disciples: baptize them in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit and teach them to obey everything I have com-manded you. And I will be with you always, to the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:18-20).

Saint Evangelist Mark speaks similarly about the meeting of the Risen Lord with His disciples “when they were eating” (Mark 16:14-18). Saint Evange-list Luke shows us clearly that Jesus Christ Risen from the dead travelled with his disciples, Luke and Cleopa, on the way to Emaus, when He explained them what the Holy Scriptures had pre-dicted about His death and Resurrection (Luke 24: 13-32). During this journey, the Lord seemed a stranger whom they invited into the house not to let him travel alone by night. After entering the house, he sat down at the table, blessed and broke the bread and gave it to his disciples to eat. Then, their spiritual eyes opened and they recog-nised the Crucified Jesus. But suddenly, He disappeared. Luke and Cleopa went back to Jerusalem and told the other eleven disciples of Jesus and those who were together with them about their encounter with the Lord Risen from the dead. While they were talking, Jesus appeared among them and explained them everything that happened to him that is about his Passions, Death and Resurrection, fulfilled just as predicted “in the law of Moses, the writings of the prophets and the Psalms.” (Luke 24:44). After telling them He will send “what the Father has promised” (Luke 24:49), that is the Holy Spirit, the Risen Jesus took them out of Jerusalem and “raised his hands and blessed them and was taken up into heaven. They worshipped him and went back to Jerusalem, filled with great joy and spent all their time in the Temple giving thanks to God.” (Luke 24: 50-53). So, we see how the blessing of the Christ Risen and Ascended to heaven brings joy to the Church, and the joy brings about thanksgiving to God.

Saint Paul the Apostle, in his Epistle to the Corinthians, speaks about the appearances of Jesus Christ, our Lord, after his Resurrection from the dead, saying: “that he appeared to Peter and then to all twelve apostles. Then he appeared to more than five hundred of his followers at once, most of whom are still alive, although some have died. Then he appeared to James, and after-wards to all the apostles. Last of all he appeared also to me – even though I am like someone whose birth was ab-normal.” (I Corinthians 15:5-8). These appearances of Jesus Christ, our Lord, after His Resurrection from the dead, show us He is mysteriously present and appears to the people when, where and how He wants.

We also see that the life of Jesus Christ, our Lord Risen from the dead is not a simple return to the life He lived among people, but a different one. His risen body passes through the locked doors (John 20:19), although Apostle Thomas sees He bears, even after death, the insignia of the nails and spear during his crucifixion (John 20:19). Although He tastes the fish and honeycomb after Resurrection (Luke 24:42; John 21.10), the Lord does it not because He needs to feed his body, but to prove his disciples He is Jesus, not a ghost or apparition. In other words, although He appears from time to time, for forty days, to his disciples and to some other persons on the earth, the Risen Christ lives the heavenly eternal life, that is free of any limit of space and time. Nobody and nothing in the earthly life can keep him, not even by sight, unless He wants to. The Risen Jesus does never dies, as He is always alive: “death will no longer rule over him” as Saint Paul the Apostle teaches us (Romans 6:9). Jesus Risen from the dead lives a new life, unlimited and everlasting, immortal, with no sufferance or decay, that is: the eternal life in the Kingdom of God.

The promise that Jesus Christ, our Lord, Risen from the dead, makes to his disciples: “And I will be with you always, to the end of the age“ (Matthew 28:20) is fulfilled in his Church and lived as such by his Church especially after the Ascension of Christ, the Lord, to heaven and the coming down of the Holy Spirit, as He himself predicted to his disciples before his Passion and Resurrection: “If you love me, you will obey my commandments. I will ask the Father and he will give you another Helper, who will stay with you forever. He is the spirit who reveals the truth about God. The world cannot receive him, because it cannot see him or know him. But you know him, because he remains with you and is in you. When I go, you will not be left all alone; I will come back to you.” (John 14: 15-18). So, we see that the same as the Holy Spirit from heaven was present in Christ when He was living on the earth, so is Christ from heaven present now in the Holy Spirit who came down and worked in the Church of Christ, which is His Body mysterious and full of the Holy Spirit.

The feast of the Resurrection of Christ and the feast of the Pentecost are mysteriously linked together through the work of the Holy Spirit of Christ, so that through His crucified body, risen and ascended in glory, to bestow then the divine-human eternal life of Christ into his Church in order to prepare it as a bride for the eternal life (John 6: 40 and 47. Romans 6:22-32; Ephesians 2:6), for the glory of the Kingdom of God or the glory of the heavenly Jerusalem (Revelation 21).

So, the Risen Christ is present in the Church through the Holy Spirit, enlightening the Church to understand the Scriptures, to celebrate the Holy Sacraments and to observe everything He commanded, always improving the life of the Christians for the final Resurrection and for the Heavenly Kingdom of the Holy Trinity (John 16:13).

The ways of the presence of Jesus Christ, our Lord, in the Church and of communicating his saving grace to those who believe in Him and fulfil his will are many and wonderful, holy and saving.

The Risen Christ is present in His Church and dedicates himself to the faithful through the obedience to the word of His Gospel and through the fulfilment of His commands, as He Himself teaches us saying: “whoever hears my words and believes in him who sent me has eternal life. He will not be judged, but has already passed from death to life” (John 5:24); “If you obey my commands, you will remain in my love, just as I have obeyed my Father’s commands and remained in his love.” (John 15:10); “If you remain in me and my words remain in you, then you will ask for anything you wish, and you shall have it.” (John 15:7).

The word of the Gospel by which Christ Himself together with the Holy Spirit is working in the hearts and minds of the faithful feeds and inspires our thanksgiving and praying to God (Romans 10:17). So, the working presence of Christ in us is felt especially in and through prayer, as this is our answer to the call Christ addresses us through the words of His Gospel. This is why before and after listening to the Gospel of Christ in the church, we sing: “Glory to you, God, glory to you!”

Another way in which Christ is present in the Church and dedicated to those who believe in him is the Holy Sacraments that the Church calls “the divine, holy, pure, eternal, heavenly and life giving, fearful Sacraments of Christ.” Rev. Dumitru Stăniloae defined the Holy Sacraments of the Church as the multiple dedication of Christ to us by which the unification of the people with Christ is done.

In the Sacrament of the Holy Baptism, Christ baptised in the River Jordan and the One who baptised his disciples first with Holy Spirit and then with fire flames, is present and united with those who believe in Him: “You were baptized into union with Christ, and now you are clothed, so to speak, with the life of Christ Himself” (Galatians 3:27). His Baptism is the Holy Sacrament by which we have the communion with the saving grace of the Holy Trinity and receive the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ, that is the Christian name which means anointed with the Holy Spirit, as the ceremony of the Anointment Sacrament says to the one anointed with Holy Spirit: “The seal of the gift of the Holy Spirit”. Through faith and through the grace of the Holy Spirit received at the Holy Baptism, Christ lives in the hearts of the baptised ones (Ephesians 3: 17-18) and prepares them for the eternal life, as Saint Paul the Apostle teaches us when he says: “If the Spirit of God, who raised Jesus from death, lives in you, then he who raised Christ from death, will also give life to your mortal bodies by the presence of the Spirit in you” (Romans 8:11).

The Risen Christ is present and working in the Church through the Holy Sacrament of Wedding, blessing with His presence and grace the relationship between bridegroom and bride as holy icon of the relationship between Him and His Church, as the Apostle says at the wedding: “For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and unite with his wife, and the two will become one. There is a deep secret truth revealed in this scripture, which I understand as applying to Christ and the church” (Ephesians 5:31-32). Christ present with His Mother and His disciples at the Wedding in Cana Galilee (John 2) is present through His grace at every Christian wedding celebrated with faith and piety in the Orthodox Church.

The Risen Christ is present and working in the Holy Sacrament of Priesthood as the steps and name of deacon, priest and bishop are Christological names, that is proofs of the work of Christ in His Church, because He is the servant (Deacon), High Priest and Bishop (The Shepherd, guardian and Bishop of your souls) (I Peter 2:25). The Saviour Himself promised he would be present in those whom He sends to confess Him: “whoever listens to you listens to me” (Luke 10:16) or “whoever receives anyone I send receives me also” (John 13.20). So, we can see how great and holy is the work of Christ through His priests consecrated by the Holy Spirit “to be shepherds of the church of God” (Acts 20:28).

The Risen Christ is present in the Sacrament of Healing, he is “the doctor of our souls and bodies” (Healing Sacrament) or the Healing Source (Service for consecrating the water), the One who healed lots of sick people. This is why Saint John Chrisostom called the Church of God “a spiritual pharmacy, where new remedies, to heal the wounds caused by the world are prepared”.
The Risen Christ is present in the Sacrament of Repentance and of the forgiveness of the sins as the One who healed the sinful woman, the weak in Capernaum, the sick at Vitezda pool and many others. The gift of forgiving the sins for getting the eternal life is the greatest gift that Christ the Lord gave to his disciples on the first day of his Resurrection from the dead, when He said: “‘Peace be with you! As the Father sent me, so I send you’. Then he breathed on them and said: ‘Receive the Holy Spirit! If you forgive people’s sins, they are forgiven, if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven’” (John 20: 21-23). Saint John Chrisostom says, when he speaks of the forgiveness of the sins through the Holy Sacrament: “Go into the church and confess your sins, repenting for them; because you will find there the doctor to heal you, not a judge to punish you; they do not want to punish the sinner there, but to forgive the sins.”

Christ Risen from the dead is present and dedicated to his faithful especially in the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist, according to his promise: “Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life and I will raise him to life on the last day” (John 6:54) or “whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood lives in me and I live in him” (John 5:56).

When explaining what Saint John the Evangelist says, Saint Kyril of Alexandria (+444) says: “As the life giving Word of God lived in the body, turned it to his own good, that is into life, and showed it, through mysterious union, becoming as he Himself is by nature, through a life giving adding. This is why the body of Christ makes alive those who take Him as communion, because when He comes to the mortals, He chases away death and removes decay, as He has in Himself the power to do completely away with decay.”

Another way of the mysterious presence of the Risen Christ in the world is His presence and call through our fellow beings who need our brotherly presence and help. Christ, the Lord, waits for our answer to His merciful love, in them, as well as in our willingness to become His merciful hands for our fellow beings in need. This truth is given by the Holy Gospel of Matthew, in chapter 25, when He speaks about the love for our neighbour as the criteria for the Last Judgement, when Christ, the just judge will tell everybody: “I tell you, whenever you did this for one of the least important of these brothers of mine, you did it for me” (Matthew 25: 40 and 45). Saint John Chrisostom teaches us that the union with Christ through the Holy Sacrament of the Eucharist is fruitless unless it fulfils the deeds of the Christian mercy: “Do you want to honour the Body of Christ? Do not despise it when it is naked. Do not honour it here, in the Church, through silk clothes if you let him outside to suffer from cold with no clothes.

The one who said: this is my body and changed it saying these words, is the same one who says: I was hungry and you gave me to eat (…). Remember it also Christ when we see your fellow being roams like a homeless stranger.”

The presence of the Risen Christ in the Church and in the world is a mysterious, spiritual presence, which is not conspicuous and which does not constrains us physically or morally, because Christ, our Lord respects our freedom to receive or to refuse Him. The Risen Christ does not force the doors of our soul, does not annul our freedom; His way meets the way of our life, but He does not enter the house of our soul and body unless we are willing to receive Him. He tells us rather often, in many ways and circumstances: “Listen! I stand at the door and knock; if anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come into his house and eat with him, and he will eat with me” (Rev. 3:20). Whoever receives Him receives eternal Life and joy, receives the heaven in his heart and house. Whoever does not open the door of his heart to Christ, locks himself outside the Kingdom of God, as the liturgical chant says during the Lent: “Here the bridegroom comes at midnight and happy is the servant whom he will find watching, and useless is the one whom he will find idling. So, see my soul not to oversleep and not to die and lock yourself outside the Kingdom….”

The presence of the Risen Christ is invoked in prayer. When we say “God help me”, God have mercy, God, be with me, God, save me, all these expressions whom we learned from the Gospel of Christ, are calls of Christ in our soul, life and activity, as His presence is offered, not imposed. The Risen Christ never misses his encounter with us, but we often forget to look for Him, to call Him and to receive Him. The best-known evidence of Christ’s presence amid us is the Orthodox liturgical greeting: “Christ is amid us”, followed by the answer: “He is, will always be, for ever and ever, Amen! So, the promise of Christ’s presence in His Church is confirmed, based on the experience of His Church, which lives in and is feeding with the loving, holy and saving presence of Christ.

The same as on the day of His Resurrection the Risen Lord came to His disciples gathered together, sat with them and blessed them, so does He come and sits amid the faithful met in His name, in any place and any time, according to His promise: “For where two or three come together in my name, I am there with them” (Matthew 18:20). While using the priest’s voice and hand, Christ meets and blesses us with His peace. This is why in the Orthodox rite the priest conveys, through word and gesture, the blessing of Christ, saying: “Peace to all of you!”, while he blesses making a cross with his right hand.

The heavenly peace that the Risen Christ brings in the souls of the faithful is the peace of man’s reconciliation with God, the power of victory over the sin and death, the power of the sacrificial love, which helps them to overcome the troubles, temptations and trials of the earthly life. This power is confirmed by Saint Paul the Apostle when he says: “I have the strength to face all conditions, by the power that Christ gives me” (Philipians 4:13). The power of the Cross and Resurrection, as mysterious but true presence of Christ in the Church, is confirmed by the apostles and martyrs who sacrificed their lives for Him, by the hierarchs, priests and deacons who fought for defending the right faith, by the monks and nuns who lived in monasteries and sketes fasting and praying, by the Christian families who gave birth to children and grew them in faith, as well as by all those who carried with joy the cross of many trials and sorrows, with the faith in the help of God and in the hope of Resurrection.

The Church lives in the presence of the saving love of Christ (Romans 8:35), in the living relationship with Him, as a result of the “faith that works through love” (Galatians 5:6) and waits with faith, hope and love the fulfilment of His promise: “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me will live, even though he dies; and whoever lives and believes in me will never die” (John 11:25-26).

I mentioned in the previous pages of the Pastoral letter, when I underlined the importance of the saving presence of the Risen Christ in the Church, proofs especially from the Holy Scripture and from the Divine Liturgy, chiefly because this year, 2008, is the jubilee year of the Holy Scripture and of the Divine Liturgy in the Romanian Patriarchy, when we celebrate 320 years since the printing of the Bible from Bucharest (1688), the first complete edition of the Holy Scripture in the Romanian language, and 500 years since the printing of the first Orthodox liturgical book, namely the Slavonic Liturgical Book published in Târgovişte in 1508. When obeying the words of God in the Holy Scripture and participating in the Divine Liturgy, we feel as strongly as possible the loving, consecrating and saving presence of Christ in the Church, in order to give us joy, peace and eternal life.

Let us enjoy the loving cones-crating presence of Christ on these days of the feast of the Holy Easter, in our souls and houses. Let us glorify Him thanking Him at the same time for the blessing and peace that He gives us when we seek Him. At the same time, let us spread joy and peace around us, by word and deed, helping especially the sick, poor and old people, those in need and distress. Let us not forget in our prayer and love our brothers from abroad, especially those far away from Romania. Let us use the time of the Holy Easter in order to strengthen the communion of love between parents and children, between spouses, friends, and neighbours and let us try “to be at peace with everyone and try to live a holy life, because no one will see the Lord without it.” (Hebrews 12:14).

We address you, in the light of the feast of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ and of the prayers of His saints, best wishes of good health and salvation, of peace and joy, of help from God in every good deed, together with the Pascal greeting “Christ is Risen!”

“The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.” (II Corinthians 13:13).


† DANIEL
Archbishop of Bucharest,
Metropolitan of Muntenia and Dobrudgea,
Locum tenens of the throne of Caesarea of Cappadocia,
Patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church
Sphere: Related Content

Friday, April 17, 2009

Holy Friday

When Friday dawned, Christ was sent bound from Caiaphas to Pontius Pilate, who was then Governor of Judea. Pilate interrogated Him in many ways, and once and again acknowledged that He was innocent, but to please the Jews, he later passed the sentence of death against Him. After scourging the Lord of all as though He were a runaway slave, he surrendered Him to be crucified.

Thus the Lord Jesus was handed over to the soldiers, was stripped of His garments, was clothed in a purple robe, was crowned with a wreath of thorns, had a reed placed in His hand as though it were a sceptre, was bowed before in mockery, was spat upon, and was buffeted in the face and on the head. Then they again clothed Him in His own garments, and bearing the cross, He came to Golgotha, a place of condemnation, and there, about the third hour, He was crucified between two thieves. Although both blasphemed Him at the first, the thief at His right hand repented, and said: "Remember me, O Lord, when Thou comest in Thy Kingdom," to which our Saviour answered, "Today shalt thou be with Me in Paradise." As He hung upon the Cross, He was blasphemed by those who were passing by, was mocked by the high priests, and by the soldiers was given vinegar to drink mixed with gall. About the ninth hour, He cried out with a loud voice, saying, "It is finished." And the Lamb of God "Which taketh away the sin of the world" (John 1:29) expired on the day when the moon was full, and at the hour when, according to the Law, was slain the Passover lamb, which was established as a type of Him in the time of Moses.

Even lifeless creation mourned the death of the Master, and it trembled and was altered out of fear. Yet, even though the Maker of creation was already dead, they pierced Him in His immaculate side, and forthwith came there out Blood and Water. Finally, at about the setting of the sun, Joseph of Arimathea came with Nicodemus (both of them had been secret disciples of Jesus), and they took down the all-holy Body of the Teacher from the Cross and anointed it with aromatic spices, and wrapped it in a clean linen cloth. When they had buried Him in a new tomb, they rolled a great stone over its entrance.

Such are the dread and saving sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ commemorated today, and in remembrance of them, we have received the Apostolic commandment that a fast be observed every Friday.
Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Holy Thursday

I would have to say that one of my favorite Liturgy of all of Holy Week is the Holy Thursday Liturgy. On this night we read the 12 passion Gospels during the matins service. Sometimes it is very confusing to be Orthodox as we like to anticipate things. So yesterday morning we did vespers at 10am and matins at 7pm. Very confusing.
After the fifth Gospel passage the priest takes the cross and in procession around the church carrying the cross on his shoulder. Our church is small so it does not take long. While the procession is going on the cantor is singing very slowly, "Today is hung upon the Cross, He Who suspended the Earth amid the waters." At the end of the procession the corpus is "nailed" on the cross and the cross is lifted up in position for veneration. Here the corpus is screwed on the wood of the cross but we use some dramatics and actually pound nails into the small block of wood. The Church is in darkness and silent and the sound of the pounding nails in only drowned out by the faithful weeping. A very moving service indeed. I believe this is the longest of the services of Holy Week, although tonight's service is almost there.
Now the cross remains in the Church until the 3:00 service when the corpus is taken down and placed on the altar, then it will be placed in the tomb for the burial service tonight.
Sphere: Related Content

Holy Wednesday

This post is coming a few days late but I have been reflecting on the prayers from the Unction Service of Holy Wednesday and wish to focus on one particular prayer. During this service the Holy Oil is blessed that will be used to administer the Sacrament of the Sick during the coming year. In the Orthodox Church, the priest is the normal celebrant of this blessing. Oil can be blessed at any time during the year for need, but the bulk of it is blessed on this night. At the conclusion of the service the faithful come forward for the anointing.
During the service seven Gospel pericopies are read that deal with healing during Jesus ministry. Each of these pericopies are followed by a prayer. As has become my custom here I move to the vessel that contains the oil and pray these prayers out loud. In the Holy Week Service Book that I use the prayers are written in small type which usually means they are optional.
As I was reading the 5th prayer it struck me and a well-spring of emotions began to build up in me. I will re-print part of it below and then comment on it.
O Lord, our God, You chasten, and again heal; You raise up from the ground and dunghill the indigent; Father of orphans, and Haven of tempest-tossed; Physician of the ailing, Who without toil bears our weaknesses, and accepts our infirmities; it is You, Who cheerfully shows mercy, and passes over our iniquities, taking away our unrighteousness; quick to help and slow to wrath; You breathed on Your Disciples, and said: "Receive the Holy Spirit; whosoever sins you remit, they are remitted unto them;" It is You, Who accepts the repentance of sinners, and has the power to pardon countless and grievous sins, bestowing healing upon all, who continue in weakness and long-enduring illness.
It is You, Lord, Who has also called me, Your humble, sinful and unworthy servant, intertwined in many sins, and wallowing in the pleasures of life, to the Holy and exceedingly lofty degree of the Priesthood, and to enter within the innermost Veil, into the Holy of Hollies, where the Holy Angels desire to penetrate and hear the voice of the Lord, God, announcing glad tidings, and to behold with their own eyes the presence of the Sacred Oblation, and to enjoy the Divine and Sacred Liturgy.
You, Lord, deemed me worthy to minster Your Heavenly Mysteries, and offer You gifts and sacrifices for our sins, and the ignorance of people; and to meditate for Your reason-endowed sheep, so that through Your great and ineffable love for mankind, You may blot out their transgressions...

You who has called me... intertwined in many sins, and wallowing in the pleasures of life, to the Holy and exceedingly lofty degree of the Priesthood... WOW, I read this and almost fell on the ground and yelled, "I AM NOT WORTHY..." It never ceases to amaze me when I come upon one of these prayers and it stops me in mm tracks. This is the third year of my Priesthood and I have read this prayer two times before, but I guess this year I am not as worried about the service this year and more into the prayers and I am actually listening to what I am reading. This is BIG! It is hard to think of the "Lofty Degree of the Priesthood," when you have your hands in the toilte cleaning it before the people arrive for services, or when you are doing some other task around the church, but I guess it is true. It is all part of the job, and you can be cleaning a toilet one minute and anointing a person the other. Man this is going to need more reflection.
Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

A Ha Moment

Ever had one of those A Ha moments? You know when you just stop and say A Ha! Well I had one of those whilst cleaning my kitchen bin not that long ago. There I was scrubbing the bin and it came to me... That's what that means. No matter how many times you read Scripture there is always something new to learn. We can always learn something and I believe that things are revealed to us as we need them or understand them.

Now I have read this Gospel passage, well I am not sure how many times I have read it. But for the last four Holy Weeks I have read this passage on Monday night during the Bridegroom service. Matthew 21:14-43. More especially vs. 36-40

"Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?" He said to him, "You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and the first commandment. The second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. The whole law and the prophets depend on these two commandments."

The last part of this is what I would like to focus on. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the faith part. We need to believe and we need to give all we have to God, not just the bits that are left over but the whole of ourselves.

You shall love your neighbor as yourself. This is the works bit. It is not just enough to love your neighbor we need to put that faith in action. We need to be concerned about your neighbor and we need to care for them, feed them, visit them, care for the sick amongst them and provide clothing to them. This is out job we are in fact our brothers keeper! It is not the governments job to do this it is our job to do this.

This is our faith in a nutshell. Everything else depends on this... We are our brothers keeper. Have you checked on your brother lately?
Sphere: Related Content

Monday, April 13, 2009

Palm Sunday



On Sunday, five days before the Passover of the Law, the Lord came from Bethany to Jerusalem. Sending two of His disciples to bring Him a foal of an ass, He sat thereon and entered into the city. When the multitude there heard that Jesus was coming, they straightway took up the branches of palm trees in their hands, and went forth to meet Him. Others spread their garments on the ground, and yet others cut branches from the trees and strewed them in the way that Jesus was to pass; and all of them together, especially the children, went before and after Him, crying out: "Hosanna: Blessed is He that cometh in the Name of the Lord, the King of Israel" (John 12:13). This is the radiant and glorious festival of our Lord's entry into Jerusalem that we celebrate today.

The branches of the palm trees symbolize Christ's victory over the devil and death. The word Hosanna means "Save, I pray," or "Save, now." The foal of an ass, and Jesus' sitting thereon, and the fact that this animal was untamed and considered unclean according to the Law, signified the former uncleanness and wildness of the nations, and their subjection thereafter to the holy Law of the Gospel.
Sphere: Related Content

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Saturday of Lazarus

Yesterday we saw the final service of the Lenten season for the Orthodox, well almost the last service Palm Sunday is th e bridge between the two so I guess you could say it was the last. This is the Saturday that we recall the rasing of Lazarus. One of my favorite Gospel passages is read at this liturgy with the most amazing verse of all, "and Jesus wept" This shows his humanity and although he knew he was going to raise his friend from death he still wept for him I find this a truly amazing thing and will be the center piece of my sermon today.

Here is a little snipit from the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese website on the Saturday of Lazarus:

According to an ancient tradition, it is said that Lazarus was thirty years old when the Lord raised him; then he lived another thirty years on Cyprus and there reposed in the Lord. It is furthermore related that after he was raised from the dead, he never laughed till the end of his life, but that once only, when he saw someone stealing a clay vessel, he smiled and said, "Clay stealing clay." His grave is situated in the city of Kition, having the inscription: "Lazarus the four days dead and friend of Christ." In 890 his sacred relics were transferred to Constantinople by Emperor Leo the Wise, at which time undoubtedly the Emperor composed his stichera for Vespers, "Wishing to behold the tomb of Lazarus . . ."

Brother of Mary and Martha and friend of Jesus we recall his raising from the dead. The troparion of the feast tells the entire story. Again from the GoArch Website:

O Christ our God, before Your Passion, You raised Lazarus from the dead to confirm the common Resurrection for all. Therefore, we carry the symbols of victory as did the youths, and we cry out to You, the victor over death, "Hosanna in the highest. Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord. "

... to confirm the common resurrection of all. ... we carry sysmbols of victory... Much of our theology is contained in this little verse that unfortunatly almost no one heard yesterday as the church was mostly empty. Could you not wait an hour with me?

Lazarus is symbolic of all of us and, as the troparion says, the common resurreciton of us all. The difference between the raising of Lazarus and that of Christ is very interesting. When Lazarus came forth from the tomb his head was still wrapped and for Christ is head wrapping was left behind. Lazarus remained covered because he was to die again. Not so for Christ as he will be raised of all of us.

Easter blessing to my family and friends of the Western Tradition and please pray for us as we enter the holiest of weeks on the church calendar. Pray also that one day we may truly be as the Creed states, "One"
Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Pastoral Letter of Archbishop Nicolae

PASTORAL LETTER FOR THE FEAST OF THE LORD’S RESURRECTION 2009

† NICOLAE
through the mercy of God
Archbishop of the Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese in the Americas
To our beloved clergy and right-believing Christians,peace and holy joy from Christ the Lord,and from us hierarchical blessings.

Most Reverend Fathers,
Beloved Faithful,

Christ is risen!

On the morning of the Resurrection, following the reading of the Holy Gospel proclaiming the discovery of the empty tomb by the myrrh-bearing women and the angel’s explanation of the Lord’s rising from the dead, we sing the troparion Christ is risen from the dead.... We hear first the announcement of the historical event related by the first witnesses, the myrrh-bearers, and only then do we proclaim to one another the wonder of the Resurrection. The historical event takes on an eternal significance by means of this proclamation throughout the ages until the end of the world.

The Lord’s Resurrection is the feast of feasts and the holiday of holidays. We call this feast Holy Pascha, using the name of the Hebrew feast of Passover or Pesach, which means passing over. For the Jews, Passover meant the passage from Egyptian slavery to the freedom promised by God. This change was effected through an actual passing through the Red Sea, under the guidance of the Prophet Moses, after many punishments suffered by the Egyptians because of Pharoah’s hardness of heart. The last of these was the death of the firstborn males of the Egyptian families and the salvation of the firstborn of the Hebrews. This meant that the passage from slavery to freedom took place through suffering and human sacrifice because of a failure to understand the commandment of God.

The Savior’s Resurrection is also a passage; not simply a passage from one state of being to another, but one which shakes the very foundation of human nature, for it is the passage from death to life, as we witness in the songs from Resurrection Matins: Today is the Day of Resurrection! O nations, let us shine forth; for this Pascha is the Pascha of the Lord, in that Christ did make us pass from death to Life and from earth to heaven, who now sing the song of victory and triumph! Christ has taken us also from the bondage of sin to the freedom of being sons of God. Through His sacrifice on the Cross, Christ has gained our liberty, transporting us from earth to heaven. He set us free from the death of sin, which was the result of our alienation from God and our ignorance of His will, and he brought us into the life of communion with God which flows from the intimacy of being sons of God by grace. Christ descended into the deepest abyss of earth, into the darkness of death, in order to bring to the light those who awaited redemption, liberation from the bonds of hell, and eternal life. This is the first passage accomplished through the Resurrection of Christ: man’s passage from the death of ignorance and estrangement from God to the life which flows from communion with God.

The second sense of the Lord’s Resurrection as passage refers to the abolition of death as the failure of human existence, as the seal of sin, of man’s separation from God. Witnessing Christ’s Resurrection from the dead, we affirm that the death of the believer no longer means the end of earthly life, but passage from this life into one of more perfect communion with God. Earthly life is not terminated in the grave; the Christian does not pass into nonexistence as unbelievers say, but passes into another life. It is about this meaning given to death, as a passage, that the Church Fathers speak when they talk about the remembrance of death as a call to mindfulness and to keeping God’s commandments. St. Anthony the Great says, Death, if one keeps it in mind, is immortality; but to not keep it in mind is death.

But there is yet another sense of the Lord’s Resurrection as passage. St. Paul the Apostle speaks about this to the Christians in Corinth: Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed—in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed. For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality. (1 Cor. 15:51-53). Our passage from death to life will be completed at the end of the ages, when the dead will rise, and those still alive will be changed. This is a change of our bodies, their passage from corruptibility to incorruptibility, from death to life. St. Paul speaks very clearly about the changing of our bodies and their being clothed in incorruptibility. At the end of the ages, when the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God (1 Thess. 4:16), the soul will be reunited with the body and together they will present themselves at the judgment. And this passage, this transformation of the human being at the end of the ages is a proof of the Savior’s Resurrection. For St. Paul continues the revelation of this mystery: When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: "Death has been swallowed up in victory." "Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?"(1 Cor. 15:54-55). The victory of life over death brought by Christ will be fulfilled thus at the end of the ages, when the body and matter will be clothed in immortality.

Beloved believers,

Through the Resurrection, Christ gives us the opportunity to attain immortality, eternal life. Through baptism, each of us receives this gift. The entirety of Christian living has as its purpose the cultivation of this gift. The gift of the Resurrection works a gradual change, a progressive passage of the Christian from death to life. The passage will be completed, in the words of St. Paul, at the second coming of the Lord, at the resurrection of the entire creation. My challenge to you at this glorious feast is that we may receive the revelation of Holy Scripture regarding the Savior’s Resurrection, and our own resurrection as passage, in several stages, from death to life; that we may receive the gift of the Resurrection and make it operative in our lives; that we may proclaim to everyone that because of the Resurrection of Christ we too will arise to true life.

The year 2009 is an anniversary year, for 80 years have passed since the founding of the Orthodox Episcopate for Romanians in America. Let us ask the Risen Lord to grant us the wisdom and power this year to complete the plan of uniting the two Romanian Orthodox Eparchies on the North American continent. And let us bear our own witness to the fact that the gift of the Resurrection is functioning and fulfills all things that are necessary for our salvation.

May Christ the Lord grant you the light of His Resurrection together with His peace and the joy of proclaiming to the world the triumph of life over death!

With a brotherly embrace in Christ the Risen Lord, I wish you Happy Holidays!

Christ is risen!

Your brother in prayer before God,
† NICOLAE
Chicago, the Feast of the Lord’s Resurrection, 2009
Sphere: Related Content

Update on Mom

If you follow me on either Twitter or Facebook you know that yesterday afternoon I received a call from my father that my mother had yet again gone to the hospital. She had gone to the doctor for a follow up to a procedure she had earlier in the week and was not feeling well so the doctor had her sent to the emergency room.

I just got off the phone with her and she is home and feeling a little better. She is having trouble standing on her own two feet for very long and they told her she needs to drink more water and eat regular meals. So the mending begins.

Thanks to all for your prayers and this shows why facebook and twitter are such great tools. In a moment of hearing the news I posted and I got word that people were praying. Odd thing is just before I posted my friend Huw posted about his dad having a heart attack and he did the same thing and in an instant prayers were being said all around the world. This is why I belong to all of these social networking sites. Keep those prayers for Huw's dad Walter and my mother Barbara if you would.
Sphere: Related Content

Friday, April 10, 2009

Remember


Sphere: Related Content

Collect for Good Friday

Almighty God, we pray you graciously to behold this your family, for whom our Lord Jesus Christ was willing to be betrayed, and given into the hands of sinners, and to suffer death upon the cross; who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

The Prayer Book Office Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 09, 2009

Collect for Maundy Thursday

Almighty Father, whose dear Son, on the night before he suffered, instituted the Sacrament of his Body and Blood: Mercifully grant that we may receive it thankfully in remembrance of Jesus Christ our Lord, who in these holy mysteries gives us a pledge of eternal life; and who now lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God for ever and ever. Amen.
Prayer Book Office
Sphere: Related Content

Giving During Lent

If you follow me on Twitter or Facebook you know that today was foodshare radiothon day here in the Village. Once a year we turn the radio station over for a 12 hour radiothon raise money for the local food pantries in our area. We serve an area of about 20,000 people and so far this year, keeping in mind that the year is only finished the first quarter, the food pantry in Southbridge alone had feed 1,500 people. They are on track to service more than 6,000 people this year alone. All of the food pantries are staffed by volunteers and there is very little overhead.

I was amazed at some of the stats that were being mentioned during the day today. It costs $.16 for a pound of food at the Worcester Food bank and that $5.00 will feed a family of four for five days. Imagine $5.00 for five days that is incredible!

Well today the organizers were a little nerveous about what was going to be collected. With the economy the way it is it was not looking good. The contributions began coming through the door and the phone was ringing but not like in years past. Everyone was working hard and at the end of the day at 6:00pm the final tally was $23,000 raised for the food pantry! Simply Amazing!

That is only the beginging and we will get the final tally in a few weeks as donations keep coming in through the mail and what not. But a big thank you to all who participated in anyway. If you live in the Southbridge area consider making a donation to foodshare and send it to the Catholic Charities building on Elm Street. If you don 't live in the Southbridge area consider making a donation to the food pantry in your local area.

God Bless All of You!
Sphere: Related Content

Food Share Radiothon

Today is Food Share day at the radio station. We will stay on the air for 12 hours from 6am to 6pm and raise money to keep the food banks open in the area. We need to raise about 20k this year as the need is great.

So far this year the food pantry has feed well over 1000 people, that is only for three months! They are on track to feed more than 6,000 people this year. We need your help, I need your help.

I am challenging my readers to call into WESO 970am at 508-909-0970 and donate some fund, give us a dollar give us a can of soup give us anything and pray for us as we move through the day. Call and listen live at www.fatherpeterlive.com

Thanks and when you call tell them you read Fr. Peter's Blog. Do it!
Sphere: Related Content

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

Collect for Wednesday of Holy Week

Lord God, whose blessed Son our Savior gave his body to be whipped and his face to be spit upon: Give us grace to accept joyfully the sufferings of the present time, confident of the glory that shall be revealed; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

The Prayer Book Office Sphere: Related Content

Tuesday, April 07, 2009

Collect for Tuesday in Holy Week

O God, by the passion of your blessed Son you made an instrument of shameful death to be for us the means of life: Grant us so to glory in the Cross of Christ, that we may gladly suffer shame and loss for the sake of your Son our Savior Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

Prayer Book Office
Sphere: Related Content

Pan - Orthodox Sermon by His Beatitude Metropolitan Jonah

This is an amazing sermon and one that we all need to listen too.



Sphere: Related Content

Monday, April 06, 2009

More Bishops Taking Shots at Each Other

A few weeks back the representative of the Ecumenical Patriarch spoke at Holy Cross in Brookline, Massachusetts. In his speech he suggested that the American Church needs to submit itself to Istanbul as the head of the Orthodox Church.
Well over the weekend, Metr. Jonah of the OCA spoke out. Read, and listen to his homily here is it a bombshell.
Sphere: Related Content

Collect for the Monday of Holy Week

Almighty God, whose most dear Son went not up to joy but first he suffered pain, and entered not into glory before he was crucified: Mercifully grant that we, walking in the way of the cross, may find it none other than the way of life and peace; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.

From the Prayer Book Office
Sphere: Related Content

Saturday, April 04, 2009

Sports Blog

Just in case you forgot there is a Local Sports Blog that a few of us are contributing to as time goes on. Fr. Greg, John, Luke, and Dennis are just a few of the folks who will be writing. If you would like to join up let me know.

Check it out here.
Sphere: Related Content

Redneck

In my last post I called myself a redneck. Well I decided to look this term up on wikipedia just to see what I was getting myself into. Very Interesting.
Possible Covenanter etymology
The National Covenant and The Solemn League and Covenant (also known as Covenanters) signed documents stating that Scotland desired a Presbyterian Church government, and rejected the Church of England as their official church (no Anglican congregation was ever accepted as the official church in Scotland). In doing so, the Covenanters rejected episcopacy—rule by bishops—the preferred form of church government in England. Many of the Covenanters signed these documents using their own blood, and many in the movement began wearing red pieces of cloth around their neck to signify their position to the public. They were referred to as rednecks.[1]
Large numbers of Scottish Presbyterians migrated from their lowland Scottish home to Ulster (the northern province of Ireland) during the plantation era. In the mid to late 18th century, they emigrated again to North America in considerable numbers, comprising the largest group of immigrants to the American colonies from the British Isles before the American Revolution.[2] This etymological theory holds that since many Scots-Irish Americans and Scottish Americans who settled in Appalachia and the South were Presbyterian, the term redneck was used for them and their descendants.

Possible American etymologies
Another possible contributing source of the term redneck comes from The West Virginia Coal Miners March or the Battle of Blair Mountain when coal miners wore red bandanas around their necks to identify themselves as seeking the opportunity to unionize.

Another contributing theory derives the term from such individuals having a red neck caused by working outdoors in the sunlight over the course of their lifetime. The effect of decades of direct sunlight on the exposed skin of the back of the neck not only reddens fair skin, but renders it leathery and tough, and typically very wrinkled and spotted by late middle age. Similarly, some historians claim that the term redneck originated in 17th century Virginia, because fair-skinned unfree labourers were sunburnt while tending plantation crops.

Much more here
Sphere: Related Content

What a Week!

This will be a quick post before I dash off to cover my first ever NASCAR event. I know what am I doing covering NASCAR, well that is a story for another day but I have embraced my inner red neck. Someone told me that we all have redneckness in us and it is up to us to embrace it or not. For now I am choosing to embrace the redneckness inside of me... YE HA!

Okay glad I got that out of my system.

This past week was my first week hosting the morning show on WESO 970 am in Southbridge. What a wild ride that was. It is not as easy as it looks, or sounds, and I have much to learn. If you have been listening drop me a note and let me know what you thought, what I can change, what you would like me to discuss, etc. More local news, less local news, etc. So I continue on Monday.

I promised last week that I would post about the Kirkin of the Tartans ceremony last Sunday and I have not done so. I promise that I will before the weekend is out. Monday is Tartan Day here in the US so I will post about that as well. That will be much of the show on Monday.

Holy week begins for my Western friends and family so I wish them a blessed and holy holy week. For us Easterners we have another week. I think we do it this way so we can watch what the West does and then copy it, I don 't know. Anyway lost going on.

Okay off I go! YE HA! (I could not resist)
Sphere: Related Content

Thursday, April 02, 2009

Moses statue toppled

WORCESTER — The recently restored statue of Moses that was moved into the new Worcester Trial Court building last month was heavily damaged about noon today when it was knocked over by a man who was then taken into custody by authorities.

The 8-foot-4-inch plaster cast replica of Michelangelo’s famous marble sculpture was pushed off its platform onto the floor and appeared to have sustained heavy damage. The statue, which had been in the old courthouse at the north end of Main Street for 97 years, was relocated to the new courthouse at 225 Main St. March 10, after undergoing about $18,000 in restoration work paid for by the Worcester County Law Library Trust.

“Oh my God, I don’t believe it,” Suzanne Hoey, head law librarian, said as she surveyed the damage and took photographs of the statue. “They’re not going to be able to fix this,” she said.

Information about the man charged with the vandalism was not immediately available.

From the Worcester Telegram
Sphere: Related Content