book review : Songs of Praise – A Psalter Devotional for Orthodox Women

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Just got back from visiting my dad in Florida for Thanksgiving and I am SO GLAD that my copy of Songs of Praise was waiting for me in my mailbox when we returned!!!  Songs of Praise is a devotional, perhaps one of the first  devotionals written with Orthodox Christians in mind.  Its author is Sylvia Leonaritis, who also writes the popular blog Orthodox Mom.  For many years now she has organized an online Psalter Prayer group made up of Orthodox women the world round.

Over the years, praying the psalms has been a great source of joy and comfort to me, so I was really really glad to hear about this book.  For Orthodox Christians the psalter is our ancient song of Praise and hymn of prayer.  The Psalter is the ancient hymnal of Israel and of the Church.   It is a deeply integral part of our faith and worship.   So as soon as we opened the mail, the dog and my youngest daughter and I took a walk into town to the local coffee shop and I sat outside to pour over the pages of Songs of Praise.

I really love that – between each Kathisma – Sylvia offers words of encouragement rooted in faith and stemming from her own personal journey and walk with Christ.   Her own struggles, her own joys, her love of God and her Faith walk.   Such reflections are a reminder that the psalms are not just lofty words but rather speak to the heart of every Christian and also that the psalms encompass every human emotion from thanksgiving, brokenness, repentance, tears, Praise, sorrow, joy, grief, fear, anger, seeking refuge, love, blessing, seeking God and ultimately offering ourselves to Him and cultivating that needful relationship in prayer.

In other words – real life, real struggle, real joy.

Sylvia’s reflections remind the reader that Christ Himself is present in the psalms and that He meets us wherever we are in our walk of Faith and that our journeys of Faith are not about being perfect people but about being a people who through Christ – in our Orthodox Faith – are being perfected.

There is ample space in the book for journaling and devotion.   This is a lovely practice that we see so often from our Protestant friends  – but in fact – I would put forth that journalling is really an Orthodox practice.   Monastics keep spiritual journals and I am a firm believer that Orthodox monastic practices are a benchmark and guidepost for us all.   Not only that, the Psalter itself is an outpouring of the heart of Saint David – the man who is called “a man after God’s own heart”    The Psalms are actually his devotions.

The journalling pages are a great place to write your intentions, to cast your cares, give thanks, draw a picture, list those whom you hold up in prayer, copy a psalm verse you want to commit to memory, or to journal a word or phrase that has special meaning during this season of your individual journey in Faith.

Sylvia has been journalling for many years, and mentions that it is a great source of joy for her to go through the previous years pages of her journals and see how God has woven goodness in her life, how prayers have been answered or even unanswered and how that has all been needful and worked together for good in her life.

One of my favorite reflections in the book is Letters to the Theotokos because it is so sweet – a lovely reflection on our devotion to Panagia and her role in our salvation and example as a mother, the veil of her protection and intercession for us all.

If you’ve never prayed the psalms know this – the reading of the psalms is a beautiful encouragement to everyone – to pray the psalms and have them pray in you.  It will uplift your life.  This devotional is a great resource – encouraging women (and men) to bring the psalter into the rhythm of everyday life and the Liturgical cycle.

I can not encourage you enough to get this book.  It is available at the Ancient Faith Store

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fasting or feasting?

The Psalter Prayer Book

 

“The more deeply we grow into the psalms and the more often we pray them as our own,

the more simple and rich will our prayer become.”

― Dietrich Bonhoeffer

 

Today begins for Orthodox Christians our preparations toward the Nativity and it is such a gratitude that psalter prayer groups begin today in countless Orthodox Churches and social media groups.  Especially for moms, between this weekend and Nativity most everything becomes a blur.   If you have kids there are lots of Christmas concerts and pageants and festivities that all require their share of running around and planning and time.  Each one of them is a joy –  but if we’re honest, most people find that need for balance, focus and silence catches up with them because there is so much to do and it all just blends together.

Those holiday hectivities (I just made that word up) is one reason I am so fortunate that for the past many many years I have been with a local Psalter Prayer group formed by an extraordinary group of prayerful women – I’ve learned so much from them.

One thing in particular I have learned is that the whole body of us is so much greater than the sum of our persons.  That is because when we start praying the Kathismas on the 15th the entire psalter along with our individual intentions and commemorations will be offered daily.  That is a mighty thing.

Praying a Kathisma is about twenty minutes that often passes so quickly, one feels they have barely begun.

What else I have learned from these prayer warriors is that on those days when I fail in my prayers I know that I have been born on the prayers of others.

It’s the beginning of the Nativity Fast, most of us are having some combination of veggies and beans for the next forty days, and yet feasting on the Psalms we lack nothing.  May this Nativity Season be blessed and bountiful for you and for all of us!


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.


sweet praise

Psalms and Hymns

 

Psalmody is the ABC for beginners, progress for the more advanced, confirmation for the perfect, the voice of the Church. It makes festivals radiant; it creates mourning that is in accordance with God, for psalmody draws tears even from a heart of stone.

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Saint Ephraim the Syrian

 

Blessings as we usher in the Nativity Season

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Praise the Lord, for a psalm is a good thing;

Let praise be sweet to our God.

The Lord is building Jerusalem,

And He shall gather together the dispersion of Israel;

He heals the brokenhearted

And He binds up all their wounds.

He numbers the multitude of stars

And calls them all by name.

Great is our Lord, and great is His strength;

His understanding exceeds every measure.

The Lord raises up the gentle,

But humbles sinners to the ground.

Begin with thanksgiving to the Lord;

Sing to our God with the harp,

To Him who covers heaven with clouds,

Who prepares rain for the earth,

Who makes grass grow on the mountains

And the green growth for the service of men,

To Him who gives the cattle their food

And who gives food to the nestlings of ravens

When they call upon Him.

He shall not take pleasure in the strength of a horse,

Nor be pleased with the legs of a man;

The Lord is pleased with those who fear Him,

And with those who hope in His mercy.

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Psalm 146