on anger

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The beginning of freedom from anger is silence of the lips when the heart is agitated; the middle is silence of the thoughts when there is a mere disturbance of the soul; and the end is an imperturbable calm under the breath of unclean winds.

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Saint John CLimacus

step 8 : the ladder of divine ascent : no. 4


he who would lose his life

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A man does not cease to feel pain because he has seen God.  On the contrary, God’s presence is often felt in the midst of great agony, in the midst of great pain, in moments of great loss and failure, for he who would lose his life for My sake shall find it (Matt 16:25).

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Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra

Psalms and the Life of Faith



light from Light

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God came to earth in order to search for the lost coin (Luke 15:8-9);  to rekindle the smoldering wick (Matthew 12:20); to bind up and heal the sick and the suffering.

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God mingles with crowds in the streets; He has dinner with tax collectors and talks to prostitutes (Matthew 9:11);  He searches the dwellings of the poor in order to find those

who are looking for Him,

who are waiting for Him,

and who need and desire Him.

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Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra


return to innocence

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We are approaching a beautiful time of repentance set aside for us in the life of the Orthodox Church.  Already the Church is priming us with the beautiful Sunday’s of preparation… Zacchaeus’ generous repentance and ammends to those he had wronged , the humility of the tax collector, the coming to his senses of the Prodigal Son.   All of this is but a little leaven softening the lump of our hearts.  Great Lent is my favorite season of the Church – but I know I say that about all of the seasons set aside in the Church – I guess they all are my favorite, really.

As a parent, I have tried to explain this word repentance to my daughters. I want them so comfortable with it that they could cuddle up with it like a blanket. I want them to nestle in the Truth of Faith and embrace the timeless wisdom and Grace of the Church and live their lives in it rather than to be pulled in so many opposite directions by popular culture.

Over the years, what I have noted is that in today’s relative everything goes world many ears have hardened to this word making it sound more like a punishment than a healing holistic way.

Upon those ears, repentance looks more like an angry wagging finger rather than an inviting outstretched Hand.

Why do I need repentance?   Most often we need it because life happens. We get mired in the muck of it and the muck of it gets all over us.  The muck of life getting in your eyes and mouth and skin absorbs into you.  It’s toxic.  But it’s always the muck of life, because we also make bad decisions which like the Prodigal l lead to a far country, perhaps despair and lousy nourishment – that depletes rather than restores us.

And so the Church guides us gently into Repentance.  The fruit of repentance is a heart returning to innocence – something like that of a child.  Another helpful explanation I have heard is that it is a cure or return to wholeness. A monk, older than me, once told me that after years of not seeing a childhood friend who had entered Orthodox monasticism he made the journey to visit her and saw in her all of the qualities of innocence he remembered from when they were children together and this for me is now the image of repentance.

I suppose that’s why monastics also say that repentance is gift and but also our task.  It’s a heart given entirely over to Christ.  It is a life long struggle.

Faith like a child, love like a child, forgiveness and innocence like a child. I want that – I need that. don’t you?



roots

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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.

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Saint Euthymius the Great

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