like a hammer

IMG_5765

+

When you want to cut down a tree you strike at it once, twice… a thousand times.  This is how we should strike at our hardened hearts, at the frozen surface of our souls.   If we do this, then with God’s help, we will come to understand something of God’s glory.  How is it that I strike at my heart, so that I might crack it open?   One way is by reading and reflecting on the Psalms.

+

Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra

+

The Orthodox Church has entered into the period of the Lenten Triodion.  This is the time our Mother the Church sets aside to lead the faithful on our annual approach to Great Lent.  It is a beautiful time of the year.  The time leading up to Lent is one of great encouragement, when an abundance of Grace is poured out and the faithful are exhorted, through the enriching hymns and readings of the season, to humility and repentance.

A lot of people hear the term Great Lent and they immediately think only food and “diet”.  “Oh, Great Lent, so what are you giving up,” is often asked.  A priest at our parish likes to remind us that we don’t subtract during Great Lent – we add!  We don’t focus on what we can’t have, but on all that we integrate.  After all, we don’t stop eating, we just change of what we partake – on many levels.

In other words, we joyfully enter the Fast, with our glasses and plates half full – rather than half empty.

The Greek word for diet, is “diaita“, meaning “way of living” or “regular daily work“.  So while, it’s easy to focus on food alone, the Lenten diet is a “way of living” and because we are called to “repentance” it is also our “regular daily work“.

So, where we might otherwise spend our time frivolously, we strive to add the many Lenten services into our routines.  That usually means shifting around some things on the calendar.  And if you are a parent, don’t worry about the kids missing an activity here or there.  You will never ever look back later in life and regret that you took your kids to Church.  And you know what, neither will your kids.  Mother’s who love their kids set the bar high, and that is what the Church does for us.  It’s not that we can necessarily reach it, but we can each in our own effort make a start.  A bar set too low usually only becomes a stumbling block.

Great Lent is not so much about restricting ourselves but rather the fullness of sobriety.  For our physical food, we opt out of clogging, anabolic and heavy foods in exchange for those that are cleansing, lighter and catabolic.  And it is not just our physical nourishment, but our spiritual nourishment too.  We forego the noisiness and aimless clutter of worldly entertainment, video games and such, to make room for focus and the redemptive time of peacefulness of devotion to spiritual nourishment.  That is a challenge – especially if the majority of your friends are not Orthodox, but each does the best they can.

Psalter Prayer groups form in many Churches, and Orthodox Christians try to find a little more quiet time for prayer, along with spiritual reading, greater almsgiving and focusing on our relationships and of course the spiritual mending of Confession.

All of these additions to our “way of living” are meant to remind us of our first love – the Greatest Commandment – and to open to us the doors of repentance, thereby bringing us to a place of contrition, a softening of hardened hearts,  leading us to repentance and Christ’s Resurrection – the Feast of Pascha.

+ + +

If you would like to assemble a Psalter Prayer Group, now is the time.  You don’t need to have twenty women, but it is very nice, because when there are twenty the Psalter will be prayed in it’s entirety daily.  Don’t be discouraged if there are fewer, our group has had plenty of years when we were fewer in number – two or three gathered in His name is just fine.

Here is a link from an earlier post about Psalter Prayer that has an explanation for setting one up.




roots

IMG_5654

+

It is not the place lace that produces success, but Faith and a firm will.

A tree that is often transplanted does not bear fruit.

+

Saint Euthymius the Great

Such a great encouragement to “bloom where you are planted”



His promises are true

img_5613

The testimony of the Lord is trustworthy because the Lord bears witness to nothing other than Himself and the inner principles of His creation (Jn 5:30-32).  Whatever God tells us is trustworthy, whatever He promises will come to pass.  God’s testimony is so reliable,  He grants wisdom even to children, since it confirms them in their faith and belief.

+

Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra


God has not abandoned you


IMG_5755

The truth is that afflictions are not a sign of God’s absence or abandonment but rather of His presence.

+

Afflictions are like the kneading of dough in the making of bread.  They are the preparations for the mystical marriage, and without them the soul is left uniformed, cold and alone.

+

It is affliction alone that can tear us away from our isolated, individual existence and transform us into something much more whole and open.

+

Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra



because He first loved us

IMG_5636

We love Him because He first loved us. (1 John 4:19)

In the end, this is not the agony of man trying to find God, but the agony of God trying to find man; it is the pain of God running in love to those that abandoned Him, that were cut off from Him, that forgot about Him, that despised and rejected Him.

+

Until the lost shall be found, until the finite be united with the Infinite, God will be in agony

+

Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra


salvation is not a formula {repost}

mystery of the ways of salvation

 

“for each person, there is a unique path towards God and those who are spiritual should know this mystery and dispense for their brothers the knowledge of these unique paths.”

The Enlargement of the Heart

Archimandrite Zacharias

+ + +

“Since Christ is the power and wisdom of God the Father—the brightness of the Father’s glory (Heb 1:3), the substantial and perfect Image of the invisible God—where He is, there is the uncreated and saving grace of God. His Cross restores man to immortality and stirs up desire for the things of heaven.”

The Orthodox Study Bible: Ancient Christianity Speaks to Today’s World

footnotes 1 Corinthians 1:24