like a hammer

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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.

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Elder Aemilianos of Simonopetra

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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.

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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.


matins of Holy Friday

lamentations

On Great Friday, we observe the Holy, saving and awesome Passion of our Lord, and God, and Savior Jesus Christ;

the spittings, the scourgings, the buffetings, the scorn, the mocking, the purple robe, the reed, the sponge, the vinegar, the nails, the spear and above all, the Cross and death, which He willingly suffered for us.

We also observe the confession unto salvation of the penitent thief, who was crucified with Him.

from the Synaxarrion of Great Friday

the 15th Antiphon is chanted in all Orthodox Churches on Thursday evening.

The music is the Boston Byzantine Choir.


holy wednesday

Great and Holy Wednesday

in all of our days let us be glad

for the days wherein Thou hast humbled us

For the years wherein we have seen evil

And look upon Thy servants

and upon Thy works

and do guide their sons

Service of Vespers : Wednesday of Holy Week

Christ the Divine and Heavenly Bread

Gives food to all the world

Come then O lovers of Christ

and in our mouths of clay

but with pure hearts

let us receive in faith the Passover

that is sacrificed and offered in our midst

Service of Compline : Wednesday of Holy Week


holy tuesday

extreme humility 2015

Pascha means passover or passage

Christ is the ultimate fulfillment of Pascha.  He performed the ultimate passage : from death into life, from this “old world” into the new world and new time of the Kingdom.  And He opened the possibility of this passage to us.  Living in “this world,” we can already be “not of this world”.

Here and now, we can be free from slavery to death and sin, and partakers of the world to come.  But for this we must perform our own passage.  We must condemn the old Adam in us.  We must put on Christ in the baptismal death and have our true life hidden in God with Christ in the “world to come”.

Thus Easter is not an annual commemoration – solemn and beautiful – of a past event.  It is this Event itself, shown and given to us, as always efficient, always revealing our world, our time, our life as being at their End and announcing the Beginning of the new life.

The first three days of Holy Week challenges us with this ultimate meaning of Pascha and to prepare us to understand and accept it.

Father Alexander Schmemman


holy monday

Matins Holy Monday

Behold the Bridegroom comes in the middle of the night;

and blessed is the servant whom He shall find watching,

but unworthy is he whom He shall find in slothfulness.

Beware then, O my soul, and be not overcome by sleep,

lest thou be given over to death and shut out from the Kingdom.

But return to soberness and cry aloud :

Holy Holy Holy art Thou, O God

Through the prayers of the Theotokos have mercy upon us.

The service of Matins

Holy and Great Monday


palms & hosanna

Entry_Into_Jerusalem

Palm Sunday

 

behold your God

ineffable . inconceivable . untameable .  humble – riding on a foal

the true Light illumining all

 

Today the faithful greet Him with palms and branches.

Glorious!  Triumphant!  Joy!

This is Holy Week.  Steadfast, we will journey with Christ

together with our friends and families – a community of faith.

 

The Last Supper. The Betrayal. Trial. Scourging. Denial.

Extreme Humiliation. Rejection. Forgiveness. Voluntary Crucifixion.

 

We will weep with His Most Holy Mother

 

chant Lamentations

 

And together with Joseph and Nicodemus we will beg for His body,

wrap Him in fine linen and place Him in a new tomb.

We will come hand in hand with the myrrbearers to anoint His body and find it is gone.

And on Pascha we will behold the awesome glory of His Resurrection

 

Great Lent is over and the faithful have emerged

– prepared for this journey through the mystery of Holy Week-

earthly cares and senseless hollow triflings aside

 

because even during this arduous . solemn . heart-wrenching . brutal yet hopeful path to Golgotha

His burden is easy and His yoke is light

This is Palm Sunday, and  today the faithful – filled with the hope of the Resurrection –

join with the angels & children, singing a song of victory

 

glory to God

Hosanna in the highest

blessed is He that comes in the name of the Lord!

 

“Palm Sunday is ‘the end of an entire process of preparation, as revealed in the Bible.  It was the end of all that God did for us, and thus this short hour of Christ’s earthly triumph acquires an eternal meaning.

It introduces the reality of the Kingdom into our time, into all hours, and makes this Kingdom the meaning of time and it’s ultimate goal.  The Kingdom was revealed in this world and from that hour.  It’s presence judges and transforms history…

On Palm Sunday, this reality is our own involvement in and our responsibility to the Kingdom of God… And He does not need any “symbols” for He did not die on the Cross that we may eternally “symbolize” His life…If we are not ready to stand by the solemn oath which we renew every year on Palm Sunday, if we do not mean to make the Kingdom of God the measure of our whole life – then meaningless is our commemoration and vain are the branches we take home from Church.’ “

Father Alexander Schmemman

 

 


illumined tears

Lazarus Arise

Jesus wept” (John 11:35)

such is His his heartfelt Love for you and for me

displayed

 

“We understand that it is because He wept, because He loved His friend Lazarus that Jesus had the power of calling him back to life.  The power of resurrection is not a divine “power in itself”, but the power of love – or rather love as power.

God is Love and Love is Life.

Love creates Life.

It is Love that weeps at the grave and it is Love that restores life.

This is the meaning of the divine tears of Jesus.  In them love is at work again – recreating, redeeming, restoring the life of man:  Lazarus! Come forth!”

Father Alexander Schmemman

 

 

 


lenten spring asparagus

lemony olivey asparagus

This super yummy Lenten Spring Asparagus pairs well as a side dish with any lenten meal.  If you want, you can substitute it as your salad, because it can be served warm or cold.

A crunchy veggie dish like this is also great for those nights when you have everything tapas style…. little bowls of lots of leftovers or dips and sauces and breads.

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Lenten Spring Asparagus

Ingredients

1 pound fresh asparagus

1 teaspoon lemon zest (organic lemon – wash it before you zest)

6 kalamata olives pitted and sliced (you can use any variety)

If you are not fasting, drizzle with extra virgin cold or expeller pressed olive oil

Wash your asparagus and cut the bottom inch and a half off.  Leave the stalks long.  Heat a large non-stick skillet and place asparagus in it.  You should hear a sizzling sound.  Let it cook for about five minutes.  You can move it around, but I like to leave it in one place so the part of the asparagus on the pan gets a little caramelized.  It should have a bright green color when you take it off, and also still have a crispiness to it.  (Cooking note:  Some people like to boil their asparagus, but I prefer not too simply because vitamins and minerals will leach into the water – you get less nutrition that way.)

Place on serving dish.  Salt and pepper to taste.  Sprinkle zest and olives on top of the asparagus.

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Enjoy.

kalamata lemon and asparagus

Whole foods…. they are good for you!  Asparagus is an anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory food.  It is full of vitamins, minerals and fiber.  “Fermented olives” have probiotics and healthy bacteria and health protective nutrients.    The real surprise though is the lemon peel.  Lemon peel is a source of lemonene, which is a phytochemical found to prevent and even treat cancer in animals.  Lemonene is supportive of our livers (which are amazing) and a strong inducer of liver detoxification enzymes that neutralize carcinogens.  Lenten or not, this is a very healthy side dish.


lenten chili with guacamole

lenten chili

 This lenten vegetarian chili with guacamole is an easy weeknight favorite and if you end up with leftovers – it tastes even better the day after!

Chili can spark great debates about how it should be eaten.  Whether you like yours on it’s own or with rice, is up to you.  During Lent, we always serve our chili over brown rice.  The reason is a little nutrition combined with traditional know how that amounts to a complete protein on your plate.

There are twenty different amino acids that can form a protein, nine of these amino acids, our body can’t produce on its own.  In order to be considered “complete,” a protein must contain all nine of these essential amino acids in roughly equal amounts. For this reason, these nine amino acids are considered  essential amino acids —we need them in food form because our body can not synthesize these from other available amino acids.   Since proteins are the building blocks of the body this becomes a consideration during long periods of fasting.

The majority of plants and grains do not contain complete proteins; however, meat, dairy, seafood and eggs do.  During long meatless and dairy-less periods it is possible to obtain the necessary protein for our diets through the combining of certain foods.  Traditional and ethnic fasting recipes tend to combine legumes and grains in some fashion.

While it is not necessary to consume complete proteins at every meal, over the course of a day or days it makes a difference.  The following food combinations yield a complete complement of amino acids.

  1. Grains (rice, corn, wheat, barley, etc.) and  legumes (peas, beans, lentils)
  2. Seeds (Sesame or sunflower) and legumes
  3. Hummus and pita
  4. lentils and rice

These are good examples of combining foods such  that all 9 of the essential amino acids are present.

Aside from proper combining of foods, the following are good plant sources of complete protein to include in your diet.

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Quinoa

Buckwheat

Soy (tempeh, sprouted tofu and miso)

Hempseed

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Chia

Soy

Rice and Beans

Now, for the chili.

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lenten chili with guacamole

Ingredients

2 cups of any combination of the following beans : red kidney beans, white kidney beans, black beans, pinto beans

1 onion red or yellow, diced

2 carrots diced.

5 cloves minced garlic

1/4 – 1/2 cup chili powder (we use Penzey’s regular).  Use your judgement here, different chili strengths for different palates.

Salt and pepper to taste

2 chopped red peppers

1 carrot, chopped small

2- 14 oz cans diced organic tomatoes

3 cups water

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The night before, place beans in a bowl and fill to cover with water.  Leave until you are ready to make chili.

chili beans

To make the chili, rinse beans and place in large pot with water to cover.  Turn the heat to high to bring to boil and reduce to medium.  Skim any foam that accumulates.  Cook for an hour.  When the beans are done drain.  You may reserve some of the cooking liquid.

When the beans are almost done (they will begin to soften), saute the onion, red pepper, carrots and chili powder with 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large pot.  Saute for three minutes, until the chili powder becomes fragrant.

Add remaining ingredients.

saute

Cook over  low simmer, with loose lid on the pot,  for approximately 45 minutes.  Check on the consistency, you may cook longer if you like a thicker chili.

Serve over brown rice topped with a hearty scoop of guacamole (2 avocados, 1/2  clove garlic, bunch cilantro chopped, 2 tablespoons red onion chopped, juice of one lime – mash it all together).

yummy.

 

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