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)?

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!

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.

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.

Radio Ministry

Today I had a meeting about the syndication of my podcast Shepherd of Souls. For the past three weeks it has been heard on the local AM station WESO and starting this Sunday it will be heard on WPLM Plymouth/Cape Cod and WBNW 1120 Concord/Boston. So we will cover the Eastern Half of Massachusetts Northern Rhode Island and Northern Connecticut. This is big news for our little radio ministry and our ability to reach the multitudes for the faith. Keep the prayers coming as I prepare these shows each week.

The show will also be available as a podcast as well. And I am looking for sponsors for the show. It does not come free and if you would like to help email me or leave me feedback and I will let you know the details.

Where do we go from here?

This is the question that the world is asking today. The Dow fell like a rock yesterday and although things look a little better today we are still faced with some very desperate times. I was looking for our candidates to make statements about what they will do but both of them played the blame game and this is not the time for that. We need some serious people here to step up and make things happen.

I have never been a fan of this bailout because I don’t think the government needs to bailout stupid greedy people. If anything this money should be used to buy the debt of the American people and not banks and Wall Street. One of the reasons I don’t support the bailout is this quote yesterday by someone from the Treasury Department.

“It’s not based on any particular data point,” a Treasury spokeswoman told Forbes.com Tuesday. “We just wanted to choose a really large number.”

I hope this person is now in the unemployment line. We need a better answer than this and some have said that it will be far higher than 700 billion.

On the flip side many people today are talking about what we could do with that money beside bailout Wall Street. Something to keep in mind is that this money does not exists. It is not like we are taking it from somewhere else to use on this, that is not the case. This is additional money that we the taxpayers will have to pay for. In the long run we will get it back when the market corrects itself, theoretically. But we need a better accounting than we just picked a big number. Let us not go crazy and let us take our time and do this right.

18th Sunday After Pentecost

2 Corinthians 4:6-15
Luke 5:1-11

… They forsook all and followed Him. (Luke 5:11)

These are the words that Luke uses in today’s Gospel reading to describe the action the apostles took after Jesus called them to follow Him. Unlike the other Gospel writers, Luke uses this simple scene to describe what happened. They put out into a boat and go fishing. A very simple task that would change the lives of these men in a most amazing way. I often wonder if they had known what was to face them would they have gotten into that boat on that day. After all they had been out all night fishing and caught nothing. Jesus simply tells them to put out into the deep and cast your nets. That is what he is asking each one of us, to put out into the deep and cast your net. We see them men at this point change from fishermen to men fishers. They will change the world and they will change in a most radical way.The end of the Gospel passage says that they forsook all and followed Him. Discipleship has a cost and we must be willing to pay that cost if we are truly going to follow Him. We must forsake all. This does not mean that we must divest ourselves of all our worldly possessions in order to follow Jesus as a true disciple, no we must surrender our and divest ourselves of our will, our will to do only what we want to do and turn toward the other. The other person and the other situation. Jesus is calling each of us to a radical change in our lives and all we need to do is answer yes.

Greed runs rampant in our society. Greed is defined as the desire to acquire wealth or possessions beyond the needs of the individual and at the detriment of others. In other words I want it and I am going to do whatever I can to get it regardless of the cost. There is also an awareness that the needs of others are being denied but we push on anyway to get what we want. Greed is the extreme form of desire, especially when one desires things for the sake of owning them.

This past week we have seen the fallout of a nation of greedy people. People who live beyond their means and are told day in and day out that they need more. We need more, more money, more food, more oil, a bigger house, a bigger car, more, more, more! When does it end and who pays the price in the end. If we hope to acquire goods at the detriment of others we have fallen into the trap of greed. In the final analysis of all of this we need to ask what this is doing to other people. The stock market falls and the ripple is felt all across the world. Our very safety has been called into question as all of the talking heads say that a country is only as safe as the economy is strong. More and more people will be making the decision this winter to either eat or heat their house. To go see the doctor or buy food. And this did not just happen overnight, we did not wake up last week and suddenly discover that we have a problem with the economy it has been coming for years.

All last week the pendants and spin doctors have been trying to tell us why this has happened, what caused all of this to go haywire? Simply put and not one of them is willing to say this, but simply put it is greed. Greed and turning away from the holy has put us in this position. You cannot serve God and mammon is a true statement but lately mammon has been running us. Most of us live paycheck to paycheck with nothing put aside for a rainy day. I did not live through the great depression but I understand it was pretty bad. The worse thing that could happen to a nation. I am not saying that that is what we face now I am not an economist, I am an optimist.

The New York Times ran an editorial the other day saying that Wall Street is turning toward the church in these desperate times. Well all I have to say in response to that is what took you so long? Where have you been? We have been waiting for you with open arms. Now I am not saying that if we turn toward Jesus all will be well, in fact it can be just the opposite. Look again at our friends in that boat. In a few short years their leader will be dead and they will be on the run. They will be hunted down and all but one of them will become martyrs for the faith. They went from simple fishermen to world leaders in a few short years and took on the government of an empire that would eventually collapse as they all do. The Godless fall and the Godlike survive! These twelve men changed the world for all of eternity and they did as poor folks not as the rich. Judas fell because of Greed and nothing more than that. He sold Jesus to the authorities for 30 pieces of silver. Judas was the church treasurer and all he cared about was himself. And he paid the ultimate price he gave up the kingdom of God for the kingdom of mammon.

Jesus is not asking that we give up all we have and follow Him. He only wants 10 percent of what you have and he wants you to keep the other 90 percent but we only need what we need. How many pairs of shoes do we need? How many cars do we need? Maybe this year instead of going to the Caribbean or some other vacation spot we can go to the Gulf Coast and help rebuild someone’s house. We do not even need to go that far we have needs right here on our own community. Remember greed is the acquisition of goods at the detriment of others, and knowing that others needs are there and we do nothing about it. Why are we storing up treasures? Who are we trying to impress? What tare we trying to do?

I recently taught a class on death at Nichols College. I asked each of the students to think about how they wish to be remembered when they are gone. What is it that we want people to remember about us? A hundred years from now when people sit around and talk about us what do you want them to say? Do we want them to say wow he had some great stuff! Or do we want them to comment on how generous we were and how we helped our fellow human being live at the level of dignity that we each deserve. How do we wish to be remembered the choice is ours, we control that and no one else.

We are called to act, we are called to put out into the deep and to cast our nets over the side. The side of the boat is right outside that door. Outside that door is a world that is hurting a world of uncertainty a world of scared people hoping for a miracle. Cast your net into that water. Reach your hand down and help pull up that net. Reach out to your fellow man and help him. We all have the capacity to do it we just need to do it.

We, like the apostles in today’s story have been working all night. We have been working here in this community for 85 years and we are all tired. Here comes Jesus and asks us to push out into the deep, out of our comfort zone, to think of someone other than ourselves and cast our net over the side. He took simple, uneducated fishermen and made them great people that changed the world and continue to change the world to this day. It all began with a simple answer to a simple question. Will you follow me? Jesus is asking that of each one of us today, He is asking that we follow Him and change the world. But we cannot change the world if we do not change ourselves. Change is scary but change is necessary.

Push out into the deep! Cast your net over the side! Forsake all! And follow Him!

The Future of Orthodoxy

This essay was making it’s way around the internet last week but has now been removed from the site at the authors request. Thanks to Rod Dreher at Crunchy Con blog the essay was found and posted in full. Rod tells us that Fr. John has been removed from his parish by the bishop and they have come down on him like a ton of bricks. Looks like he hit a little too close to home. We must speak the truth even if it means we get removed. God Bless you Fr. John!

I have reproduced the essay below without any alteration. Fr. John has spoken the truth and this needs to be passed on and around. I will try and get more information on Fr. John and what has happened. Let’s talk about this in and see what we can do!

The Orthodox Church of Tomorrow
By Fr. John A. Peck

There is an interesting phenomenon occurring in Orthodox Christianity in America today, and reflected powerfully in our seminaries. Seminaries are loaded almost exclusively with converts, reverts (cradle Orthodox who left the faith, and were re-converted to it again), and the sons and grandsons of clergy.

I believe we are looking at the future of the American Orthodox Church — today.

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. Orthodoxy, despite the failings of its leadership, has actually lived up to its own press. The truth of the Orthodox faith, as presented on paper, is actually being believed – by those who have no familial or historical connection with the Orthodox. These poor deluded souls (of which I count myself) actually believe what they are reading about the Orthodox faith, and expect the Church to act like, well, the Church. They 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 – they will go the way of the dodo. No one will have to work against them; they will simply die from atrophy and neglect. 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.

This is a well known problem. Statistical studies taken a mere seven years ago predicted that within 10 years the Orthodox Church in the United States would for all practical purposes, no longer be viable. If nothing was done within five years (that’s two years ago) the decline would be irreversible. Demographics determine destiny, as they say. As you may have imagined, not only was “nothing done,” such reports were surreptitiously filed away, while the calls for a solution from clergy and laity alike only increased. Larger jurisdictions will, of course, have a little more time, but not a different result.

What we are looking at, of course, is of the highest concern to the hierarchy. They know, in their heart of hearts, that they cannot reverse this trend. Yet they fight a rearguard action, hoping against hope to forestall the historically inevitable movement toward an American Orthodox Church.

Statistical studies taken a mere seven years ago predicted that within 10 years the Orthodox Church in the United States would for all practical purposes, no longer be viable.The laity has already moved on. Americans, generally, don’t fall for very much strong arm intimidation or brow beating, don’t go for bullying by insecure leaders, and certainly don’t see the value of taking on and promoting someone else’s ethnic culture. They care about the Gospel, and the Gospel does not require Slavonic or Koine Greek, or even English for that matter. The Gospel requires context, which is why it cannot be transmitted in any language unknown to the listener.

When we look at our seminaries, we are looking at the Church of Tomorrow, the Church twenty years from now. Indeed, this is the Church we are building today.

Twenty years from now, I anticipate we will see the following:

Vastly diminished parishes, both in size and number. There will be a few exceptions, (and they will be exceptional!) but for the most part, most current Orthodox parishioners will age and die, and have no one to replace them. Why? Because as they have taught the context of their culture, instead teaching the context of their faith. Some parishes will simply be merged with others. Many will close outright. A few will change how they do ministry, with a new vision of parochial ecclesiology. These newer parishes will be lighthouses of genuine Orthodox piety and experience. Some parishes, I believe, will actually be formed specifically, in the old fashion, by purchasing land, building a chapel or Temple in the midst of it, and parishioners building or buying homes around it. The Church will be the center of their lives, and many will come from far and wide to experience their way of life.

Publicly renowned Orthodox media and apologetic ministries. These ministries are the ones providing a living and powerful apologetic for the Orthodox faith in our culture (that is, our 21st Century life in the United States), and actually providing the Gospel in its proper context – engaged in society and the public arena. These will succeed in visibility and public awareness more than all the speeches before the U.N. and odd newspaper stories about Orthodox Easter or Folk Dance Festivals could ever do. In other words, the Orthodox Christian faith will become that most dangerous of all things – relevant to the lives of Americans, and known to all Americans as a genuinely American Christian entity.

More (and younger) bishops. If our current slate of bishops has been mostly a disappointment, reducing their number will only tighten this closed circle, making the hierarchy less and less accessible, and more and more immune to things like, oh, the needs and concerns of their flock. The process of selection for the episcopacy will contain a far more thorough investigation, and men with active homosexual tendencies, psychological problems, insecurities, or addictions will simply not make the cut. We aren’t far from open persecution of Christians by secularists in this country, and we need bishops who know the score. With better bishops, no one will be able to ‘buy’ a priest out of a parish with a gift of cash. Conversely, parish councils will no longer be able to bully priests into staying out of their affairs, and will be required to get out of the restaurant/festival business and get into the soul saving business.

A very different demographic of clergy. Our priests will be composed of converts, reverts, and the sons and grandsons of venerable, long-suffering clergy. These men all know the score. They won’t tolerate nonsense like homosexual clergy (especially bishops), women’s ordination, or financial corruption. They will not tolerate the Church being regularly and unapologetically dishonored by her own clergy. Twenty years from now, these convert and revert priests will be sending life-long Orthodox men, a new cradle generation, en masse to our seminaries. They will be white, black, Asian, Polynesian, Hispanic, and everything in between. Fewer will be Russian, Greek, or any other traditionally Orthodox background.

Orthodox Biblical Studies. Orthodox Biblical scholarship will flourish, and will actually advance Biblical Studies, rather than tag along for the latest trends, staying a minimum safe distance back in case the latest theory tanks unexpectedly. Septuagint studies are already on the rise and Orthodox scholars will usurp the lead in this arena, establishing a powerful and lasting influence in Biblical Studies for decades to come. Orthodox higher education — specifically in Biblical Studies in the Orthodox tradition — will finally have a place at the doctoral level in the Western hemisphere, and it will become a thriving academic entity. The whole Church will feed on the gleanings of this new scholarship and Scriptural knowledge, preaching, and Biblical morality will invigorate the Church for generations.

A much higher moral standard from all clergy. The next twenty years will see a revival of practical ethics. Instead of trailing military or business ethics, the Church will, once again, require the highest standard of ethical and professional behavior from her clergy — and they will respond! The clergy will not tolerate lying, cheating, or stealing and hold to account those who practice these vices. They will vigorously defend the honor of Christ’s priesthood, and Christ’s Church. I dare say, even the clergy will finally respect their own priesthood.

Vocations will explode. As a result of the elevated ethical standard publicly expected from the clergy, candidates in far greater numbers will flock to the priesthood. There will be very full classes, distance education, self-study and continuing education going on in every location. Education at a basal level will disappear, except in introductory parish classes. Clergy will powerfully articulate Orthodoxy to the faithful and to the culture around them. Personal opinion will no longer be the standard for clergy when articulating Orthodox ethics and morality. Our seminaries must become beacons for this teaching, and give up “training culture” once and for all. We will finally begin to penetrate our society, rather than go along for the ride like a tick on a dog’s back.

Philanthropy will flow like the floodgates of heaven. Finally, the many Orthodox Christian philanthropists who annually give millions of dollars to secular institutions will finally find their own Church completely transparent, completely accountable, and worthy of their faith-building support. Let’s face it, there is more than enough money in Orthodoxy right now to build hospitals, clinics, schools, colleges, universities, and a new Hagia Sophia right here in the United States. The reason this is not being done is because these philanthropists are intelligent men and women who do not trust the hierarchy to do the right thing with their millions. This will change in short order once it is shown that transparency doesn’t destroy the Church, but strengthens it immeasurably. Frankly, I don’t anticipate every jurisdiction to do this in the next twenty years, but those that are practicing transparency will emerge as the leaders in every arena of Church existence.

Hope
This all may seem unlikely today, but it is coming.

How do I know this? For one thing, the last holdouts of corruption, Byzantine intrigue and phyletism (a fancy theological term for ethnic preference) are clinging desperately to a vision of the Church that is, quite frankly, dying fast. Oh, they are doing everything to shore up their power and influence, and busy serving their own needs, but their vision is dying. And where there is no vision, the people perish (Proverbs 29:18).

As frightening and disconcerting as it may seem to our leaders, they will learn that emerging from a cocoon, even a Byzantine cocoon, is not a bad thing. Orthodoxy is about to take flight on new beautiful wings. These are the birth pangs of a new era for Orthodoxy. God is giving us a time of freedom and light.

This new Orthodox Church will have a different face, will be ready for contemporary challenges, and will have begun to penetrate American society at every stage and on every level. This Church is the one that will be ready for the challenges of open persecution, fighting for the soul of every American, regardless of their genetic affiliation. This Church will be the one our grandchildren and great grandchildren will grow up in, looking back on the late 20th-early 21st century as a time of sentimental darkness from which burst forth the light of the Gospel. Let it begin.

Fr. John A. Peck is pastor of Prescott Orthodox Church in Prescott, Ariz.

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