Tag: Christianity

  • Patriarch of Antioch consecrates church rebuilt after 2023’s devastating earthquakes (+VIDEO)

    Latakia, Syria, May 29, 2024

    Photo: antiochpatriarchate.org Photo: antiochpatriarchate.org     

    Over the weekend, His Beatitude Patriarch John X of Antioch consecrated a church that was rebuilt after the devastating Massive earthquake destroys churches, kills 100s in Turkey, SyriaThe quake, among the strongest to hit the region in 100 years, brought numerous buildings tumbling down, trapping many unfortunate people inside.

    “>earthquakes that struck Turkey and Syria last year.

    The Cathedral of St. George in Latakia, Syria, was festively consecrated and inaugurated on Sunday, May 26.

    The Patriarch writes:

    It is a day of joy and hope. It is the Day of Resurrection, which was revealed in its most beautiful form, after the devastating earthquake that struck humans and stones in the year 2023. But here is the Cathedral of Saint George reborn, inaugurated, and consecrated by His Beatitude Patriarch John X in the event of his visit pastoral visit to the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of Latakia and dependencies.

    Photo: Facebook Photo: Facebook     

    Pat. John was greeted by a crowd of clergy and faithful as he entered the cathedral, which he then consecrated together with 14 other hierarchs and a host of clerics.

    His Beatitude delivered a homily in which he said:

    Today is a day of great joy because we performed the cathedral dedication Liturgy together with the shepherd of the Archdiocese, Bishop Athanasios, the bishops, the fathers, the priests, and the faithful people.

    As for the consecration service, it consists in placing the relics of saints and martyrs inside the holy altar, to pray before them, and ask for their intercession.

    My beloved ones, the true altar is the human being, because one abandons the old man, adopts the Lord Jesus Christ, and imitates Him, for He has redeemed us with his precious blood. And you should know, beloved ones, that for us, the consecration of the church is similar to the service of Baptism.

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  • CA Catholic groups urge Legislature to fix bill, protect all minors from sex trafficking

    Catholics in California are calling on state lawmakers to include all minors in legislation that would make it a felony to purchase or solicit a child for commercial sex, after the Senate Public Safety Committee limited the bill to include those 15 and under.

    Under current California law, purchasing or soliciting a child for sex is a misdemeanor offense carrying a maximum penalty of up to a year in jail and a $10,000 fine. Senate Bill 1414 would implement harsher penalties for such offenders: making it a felony to solicit or engage in commercial sex with a minor with a maximum penalty of up to four years in prison and a $25,000 fine.

    The original bipartisan legislation, spearheaded by state Sen. Shannon Grove, R-Bakersfield, would have applied to all minors; however, the Senate Public Safety Committee amended the bill to give courts discretion as to whether such crimes would be misdemeanors or felonies and limited it to crimes concerning the purchase of minors under the age of 16.

    Critics of the original legislation argued it was overly broad, a claim Grove disputed. She argued the committee sought to “water this down.”

    “The crime of purchasing a child, of any age, for sex in the state of California should be a prison felony,” Grove wrote in a May 23 post on X, formerly Twitter, after the Senate unanimously approved the amended bill.

    Grove called on the Assembly to restore SB 1414’s original intent to protect all minors when that chamber takes up the legislation — a view that Catholic groups are echoing.

    “Many people are shocked to hear about SB 1414, assuming that if anything is a felony in California, purchasing a child for sex must certainly be,” Kathleen Domingo, executive director of the California Catholic Conference, told OSV News. “Yet, this bill is just now fighting its way through the Legislature, thanks to the tireless efforts of Sen. Shannon Grove.”

    The state’s Catholic bishops, Domingo said, “join their voice to those legislators and other state leaders in advocating that all children under the age of 18 deserve our protection.”

    “No child is able to consent to his or her own violation,” she said. “The state of California must protect children from sex trafficking by passing SB 1414 for all children with the highest penalties for offenders.”

    The Archdiocese of Los Angeles urged its supporters to contact their lawmakers in support of the original version of the legislation.

    “We encourage passing this bill and restoring protections for all minors to the bill, including felony charges and sex offender registration,” their action alert said, adding, “Young people deserve to be protected from this violence.”

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  • Fire breaks out at Cleveland’s historic St. Theodosius Cathedral (+VIDEO)

    Cleveland, May 29, 2024

    Photo: wkyc.com Photo: wkyc.com     

    A massive fire broke out at an historic Orthodox cathedral in Cleveland yesterday.

    St. Theodosius Cathedral (OCA Diocese of the Midwest), built in 1911–1912, is formally recognized as a Cleveland landmark and was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. The church that preceded the cathedral was built with donations from Royal Martyr Nicholas II of Russia.

    The Association of Cleveland Fire Fighters IAFF Local 93 said the fire was reported at about 4:30 PM on Tuesday, reports wkyc.com.

    “They sent a crew inside to try to fight the fire from inside, but the smoke banked all the way down to the floor. They had a partial roof collapse inside. Don’t know how severe it is, but they didn’t feel comfortable having the firefighters remain inside, so they pulled them out and we’re fighting the fire from the roof,” said Cleveland Fire Chief Anthony Luke said.

    The cause of the fire remains under investigation, though locals noted that there was construction underway at the cathedral.

    Thankfully, there are no reports of injuries.

    Locals who spoke with WKYC spoke of the loss, but also their resilient faith:

    “A lot of people have their lives centered around this,” Luke noted. “We sent firefighters into the back of the church with one of the priests to pull out some of their valuable artifacts.”

    Ken Kovach has worked as the choir master at St. Theodosius Orthodox Cathedral for 52 years. He’s placed decades of music in plastic bins upstairs in the loft of in the front of the church, but is unsure what will be left when the smoke clears from the fire.

    “I realize I’m in a state of shock,” Kovach told WKYC. “This is our worst nightmare to have your church burned down.”

    People watched in horror as a century’s worth of materials fell from the tower.

    “This is a historic church sign of Cleveland and Tremont,” Jack Petito. “To see something as so iconic and beautiful as bold as this burn down … it’s just a tragedy.”

    Some people tried to salvage what they could from the ground, while others were trying to comfort a parish priest, whose eyes filled with tears. Churchgoers, however, remain hopeful amid the devastation.

    “It destroys our building, but it doesn’t destroy our faith,” Kovach added. “We are strong as Eastern Orthodox Christians. We’ll continue to have our services somewhere.”

    His Eminence Archbishop Daniel of Chicago arrived yesterday to inspect the cathedral. He will lead a service on the cathedral grounds this morning.

    Watch a local report from News 5 Cleveland:

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  • New York attorney general sued for ‘targeting’ pro-life pregnancy centers

    “How does it even remotely make sense to trust women with their medical decisions if you are actively trying to hide scientifically-based information from them?” he continued. “It makes no sense, nor is it legal.”

    The abortion pill is a two-step procedure in which a pregnant woman first ingests the drug mifepristone, which cuts off the unborn baby’s supply of the hormone progesterone, leading to the baby’s death.

    The woman then takes a second drug, misoprostol, which causes the uterus to contract, eventually expelling the baby’s body.

    Abortion pill reversal works by administering progesterone in high doses after a woman has ingested mifepristone; the hormone is meant to counteract the effects of the abortive drug. Several surveys have found evidence that the drug can be effective at halting a medicated abortion.

    “Many women regret their abortions, and some seek to stop the effects of chemical abortion drugs before taking the second drug in the abortion drug process,” ADF legal counsel Gabriella McIntyre said in the press release. “Taking supplemental progesterone at that time can often save their baby’s life.”

    “The New York attorney general, however, is doing everything she can to deny women the freedom to make that choice,” McIntyre continued in her statement. “Women should have the option to reconsider going through with an abortion, and the pro-life pregnancy centers we represent in this case truthfully inform them about that choice.”

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  • Finnish Church comments on laws concerning female genital mutilation and infanticide

    Helsinki, May 30, 2024

    Photo: ort.fi Photo: ort.fi     

    At the request of Finland’s Ministry of Justice, the Finnish Orthodox Church recently submitted an opinion on legal issues surrounding female genital mutilation and infanticide.

    Regarding female genital mutilation, the Church writes:

    The protection and care of women, children, and all those in vulnerable situations is a fundamental and essential indicator of any society. Each of us has a responsibility to work to improve the living conditions of vulnerable women and children. The Church welcomes all medical achievements that can help protect and heal people from diseases and injuries.

    Female genital mutilation is a particularly serious violation of personal integrity…

    The Finnish Orthodox Church, in accordance with the decision of the Supreme Court, is aware that female genital mutilation, previously called female circumcision, is in principle a procedure classified as an aggravated assault, which under no circumstances can be justified by religious and social motives, and equating it with circumcision of boys, from the point of view of from the point of view of a legal assessment, it is not justified.

    Regarding a law on female genital mutilation that is currently being prepared, the Church notes that it criminalizes the practice as related to cultural and religious beliefs, but does not apply to procedures performed for medical reasons. Thus, “medical indicators should be clearly defined in the law.”

    Regarding infanticide:

    The Finnish Orthodox Church states that the right of a newborn child to life is equivalent to that of individuals of other ages, and the seriousness of intentional murder does not depend on the age of the victim. The Church considers the requirement for psychiatric evaluation in cases outlined by the infanticide legislation, as emphasized in the government’s proposed bill, to be important.

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  • 14 Catholics killed in Democratic Republic of Congo after refusing to convert to Islam

    Pope Francis condemned the recent killing of 14 Catholics in the African Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) who reportedly were killed after they refused to convert to Islam.

    The Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano reported that the 14 Catholics, several of them very young, were killed in North Kivu by members of the ISIS-affiliated militia called the “Allied Democratic Forces.”

    Diverging from his prepared statements on May 25, the pope said: “I would like to stop and thank God for the testimony of martyrdom that a group of Catholics from Congo, from North Kivu, have given in recent days.”

    Francis added that “their throats were slit simply because they were Christians and didn’t want to convert to Islam.”

    According to a report by International Christian Concern (ICC), the Allied Democratic Forces also carried out an attack on the Christian village of Ndimo in Ituri state. ICC said that 11 Christians were executed with machetes and rifles on May 13 while several others were kidnapped, and some houses were set on fire.

    Butembo-Beni Bishop Melchisedec Paluku condemned the killings and praised the Christians’ resilience, ICC reported.

    “The resilience and courage displayed by the villagers in the face of such adversity are a testament to their unwavering spirit and determination to rebuild their lives amidst unimaginable tragedy,” Paluku said.

    The bishop called on the DRC government to increase its counterterrorism efforts, saying: “The brazen disregard for human life and dignity exhibited by these extremists underscores the urgent need for heightened security measures and robust counterterrorism efforts to safeguard innocent civilians from such brutal acts of violence.”

    The Butembo-Beni Diocese has been facing rising Islamist terrorism for several years. Following a bombing of Emmanuel-Butsili Catholic Church in Beni in 2021, CNA reported Paluku saying that “a large-scale project is underway to Islamize or expel the Indigenous populations” of the region.

    “Anyone who has been kidnapped by these terrorist groups and managed to escape from them alive has told the same story. They were given the choice between death and converting to Islam,” he said, adding that “not a day goes by without people being killed.”

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  • 1,500-mile procession for 300th anniversary of transfer of relics of St. Alexander Nevsky begins

    St. Petersburg, May 30, 2024

    Photo: monasterium.ru Photo: monasterium.ru     

    The Russian Orthodox Church is festively celebrating the 300th anniversary of the transfer of the relics of St. Alexander Nevsky from Vladimir to St. Petersburg throughout this year.

    Celebrations began Celebrations in honor of 300th anniversary of transfer of relics of St. Alexander Nevsky begin in St. PetersburgThis week, the Russian Orthodox Church kicked off the year-long celebration of the 300th anniversary of the transfer of the relics.

    “>in December with a moleben at St. Alexander’s relics in the St. Alexander Nevsky Lavra in St. Petersburg and the opening of an exhibition in his honor.

    And on Sunday, May 26, a two-week automobile procession began in his honor, headed by His Grace Bishop Benjamin of Kronstadt, abbot of the St. Petersburg Lavra. The procession will pass through the historical sites that his relics passed through in 1724. It lasts until June 20, reports the Synodal Department for Monasteries and Monasticism.

    Photo: monasterium.ru Photo: monasterium.ru     

    Pilgrims are carrying a revered 17th-century icon of St. Alexander with a particle of his holy relics.

    Bp. Benjamin celebrated the Divine Liturgy and a moleben before the start of the procession.

    “We’ll visit the historical sites where the procession went through 300 years ago, pray at the holy sites of the Vladimir, Tver, and Novgorod lands, and serve in ancient monasteries. I’m glad that the Lord has vouchsafed me to be involved in such historical events,” said the bishop.

    The route covers about 1,500 miles.

    In Vladimir, pilgrims visited the Nativity of the Theotokos Monastery, where St. Alexander’s relics were located before being transferred to St. Petersburg, and other holy sites.

    The procession will end with a moleben on June 10 on the site of St. John the Forerunner Church where the relics were kept in 1723–1724 before they were delivered to the monastery in St. Petersburg on September 12, 1724.

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  • A Christian Surrounded by Non-Believers

    Every Christian has people around him who do not believe in Christ. We often have conflicts with them, because the life of an Orthodox Christian is regulated by the Church Typicon one way or another. There are some days when must go to Church services, there are periods of fasting, and so on. What are we supposed to do? We are not always able to immediately make the right decision. This subject is especially relevant now, when the Church recently celebrated St. Thomas Sunday. We have talked with Priest Nikolai KonyukhovKonyukhov, Nikolai, Priest

    “>Priest Nikolai Konyukhov, a teacher of the Department of Church Practical and General Humanitarian Subjects of the Sretensky Theological Academy, and cleric of the Holy Trinity Church at Saltykov Bridge in Moscow.

        

    Father, could you give us a general rule—in which cases we should ignore the Church Typicon for the sake of love for our neighbor, and in which cases we should stand our ground firmly and not compromise our principles?

    —The most important law that the Lord has given us is the commandment of love. In ancient times, the law was the basis of everything, and Judaism is still considered to be the religion of the law. It was by observing the rules that a person was considered to be pious, to honor God and regard Him as his Father. And even breaking the slightest commandment was considered a violation of the entire law. In the New Testament, the Lord says that He gives people the principle of love and the principle of conformity. We must discern what love is and how we should combine love for our relatives and the strictness of the rules. As we know from the Lord, love is sacrifice. When it comes to fundamental dogmatic issues, we try to show consistency, rigor and precision. It is difficult to imagine such a situation when parents ask their children to renounce Christ for their sake—most often it is about some everyday moments.

    Many people call it “betrayal” if you come to your grandfather and he treats you to meat dumplings during the fast. My grandfather is ninety-four, he has his own diet, and if I come with my Lenten food he will not be very pleased. He wants to cook something special for his beloved grandson. The first time, I was confused and spoke with my father-confessor about this. There are moments when you can compromise something and not impose your views on another person, but there are also fundamental moments.

    If your friends have invited you to a concert at the club on Holy Friday, for the love of your neighbor you can go with them. Sometimes it’s about loving others, and sometimes it’s about loving yourself, and that’s the most important indicator. When you compromise out of self-love, to gratify your pride or to indulge your passions, then this is unacceptable. And when it comes to your neighbors, when your elderly mother asks for your help on Sunday, then go to the service on Saturday. The main rule is that if you act according to the law of love for Who is Our Neighbor?Love of neighbor is a clear test of our Christian life. But in order to understand what the love of our neighbor is, it would be good to first clarify who in fact is our neighbor?

    “>your neighbor and show love to him, then you understand that you were not created for these rules, but these rules were created for your salvation.

    Suppose a wife comes to believe in the Lord and begins to go to church, but her husband and the other family members do not. And she wants to go to church on Sunday, but the family has other plans. In this case should the wife obey her husband, or put the question pointblank and say that she listens to God more than people?

    The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife (1 Cor. 7:14), the Apostle Paul wrote about this. A Christian should be a torch. Our task is to make people’s lives better and enlighten them. The Light of Christ illuminates all (cf. Jn. 1:9), including our loved ones. And the biggest problem is, “when a family member becomes a Christian, all the other family members become martyrs”. Unfortunately, there is some truth in this joke.

    There is an interesting rule that I heard from a priest. When a person comes to the faith, he must ask himself the simple question: “What does my family gain from me being a Christian?” We never ask ourselves such a question. We generally have an egoistic system of views and think more about our own benefits. But Christ gives us an absolutely different commandment: If any man desire to be first, the same shall be last of all, and servant of all (Mk. 9:35).

    James Tissot. Christ Teaches the People by the Sea. 1886–1896 James Tissot. Christ Teaches the People by the Sea. 1886–1896     

    The wife of someone I know became a Christian, and she was lucky enough to have a good A Father-Confessor Is a “Signpost” Directing You Towards GodA person should only put the Lord first. You must walk towards this through repentance.

    “>father-confessor. The priest wondered why she was constantly arguing with her husband, and explained that men understand love through respect and obedience. If a wife does not listen to her husband, she does not respect and does not love him. And Christianity helped this woman understand that she should not carry everything on her shoulders, but hand over the reins of the household to her husband. She felt and looked better after that. Her husband even came to the priest and asked what had happened to his wife. He said she would come home from church so gentle and kind. When someone in a family becomes a vegan or goes on a diet, he begins to dictate to his family the rules of what he can eat and what he cannot, and now it is no longer possible to cook the same food for everyone.

    It can be even worse when a neophyte converts to Christianity. He will dig down to the bottom: “They listen to the wrong music and talk the wrong way.” And we should get attuned to the fact that after embracing Christianity we all become preachers of the Christian faith. The Apostle Paul appeals to Christians with a cry full of pain: For the name of God is blasphemed among the Gentiles (Rom. 2:24). This applies to every Christian, because each one of us is part of the Church, and outsiders judge the Church by us. We just don’t care about it, and when we swear in line in a store, we don’t think about the fact that we are blaspheming the name of Christ among the gentiles. Religion should draw us towards the light. But we use the commandments as a weapon and justify our weaknesses by our religious beliefs. When Christ talks about blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, He also means the misuse of our gifts. Christ gave you a wife to make her happy, but she cries all the time. Or you became a Christian and began denouncing everyone, tormenting them with quotations from the Holy Scriptures.

    As for denunciations, there can be a problem when your colleagues at work use foul language. What should we do about it? Should we denounce and rebuke them, or tacitly show indignation and disagreement?

    —I grew up in a priest’s family, my father is a priest. It was no secret among our circles in Moscow as well as in the countryside. No one ever swore in our family—it was considered indecent. Plus, my mother has a philological education; she graduated from the Institute of Foreign Languages. I never used foul language either. In the company where we hung out in the 1990s it was exactly the opposite. When I joined them, I didn’t swear, and it was noticeable. I was often younger than the other guys, and so I never told them that I didn’t like swearing. But gradually people began to understand that I did not swear, and in my presence, they even began to apologize if they used obscenities, although I never rebuked them. Later it got to the point where a new guy would join our company, start swearing, and the others would tell him not to use obscene language in my presence. I didn’t do anything to cause that. My secular friends knew that I did not swear, and they also apologized whenever they used foul language in my presence. It seems to me that when a person himself preserves culture and behaves with dignity, it sets a good example. Much depends on how you behave. I could not stand to remain in the presence of vile abuse. After all, when we turn on the TV and hear foul language, we can simply change the channel and not watch it.

        

    Sometimes people ask: “I see that my friend doesn’t live properly. How can I tell her about it?”

    —There is a great sin that people hardly ever repent of in confession. I am talking about when a person lives someone else’s life. The Lord gives us the greatest gift, and tells each one of us to work our salvation. The saints spoke about this as well. But our thinking is such that we begin to work on our salvation, we realize that it is long and complicated, and we don’t really want to do it anymore. Our consciousness always switches to what is easier. Like water, we tend to flow to where it is freer. We don’t want to solve very difficult tasks. We don’t want difficulties. On the contrary, we tend to seek a comfort zone. We will always be inclined to save someone else, and we will think that they will not be able to cope without our help. But this often has detrimental consequences. During confession I usually show people the cross on which Christ is depicted and say that He is the Savior, and He is the only One Who saves people. Why do we play saviors? St. Anthony the Great says: “Do not suggest anything to anyone as a rule before you yourself fulfil it.” First do something yourself, learn something, and then offer your help. St. Ignatius Brianchaninov

    “>St. Ignatius (Brianchaninov) says, “A pious yet inexperienced adviser can give more harm than help.”

    How can this commandment be fulfilled by someone who is an extrovert by nature? It seems to me that we often perceive this commandment as kind of going back into our shells and an attempt to practice ascetic life, but not to be socially active. Is it possible to be active by fulfilling this commandment?

    —It by no means implies that you should be unsociable or withdraw into your shell. It can be perceived by people as disdain, as if a person is not interested in what is happening to others at all. A socially active person communicates, talks about himself, about his life, about his ups and downs, listens to other people and shows interest in their lives. But it’s another matter when a person teaches. Thus, he goes on the warpath. He has not attained salvation and has not acquired any virtue yet, but he is already determined to change and break other people. We often use certain things to our own benefit. We even use good quotes and correct instructions to our advantage. Suppose a husband says, The wife see that she reverence her husband (Eph. 5:33), and starts being rude to her and shouting at her. A person can justify his base passions with sublime quotations from the Holy Scriptures. To prevent this, I often use the following brilliant quotation from the Holy Hierarch Gregory the Theologian and even repeat it for myself: “It’s good to teach, but it’s much safer to learn.” It seems to me that this phrase hits the nail on the head. Before you tell people anything, you need to learn thoroughly yourself. I have been a priest for ten years now and I remember that when I was a very young priest, I so wanted to teach people, explain something to them, tell them something. But the older I get as a priest, the less I try to give advice. Now I do it only if a person asks persistently, and I try to do it very carefully, because what works for me may simply not suit another person. Of course, I can cite something from the Holy Scriptures or Church Tradition. I am surprised how delicately the Synaxis of the Optina Elders

    “>Optina elders gave advice.

        

    We should be socially active, communicate with everyone and be friendly to people, but we should be very cautious with “teaching”. There are two concepts: vertical and horizontal. If you are vertical, like a teacher with his students, you can evaluate their work. You can judge whether someone has written a good or bad work. It’s not your student who is bad, but his work. Likewise, A boss can evaluate the work of his subordinate, not the subordinate himself. And when we are horizontal, we try not to evaluate each other. If a person has not made you his teacher and mentor, why do you have the audacity to teach him? When you are asked for advice, then you can say something carefully and delicately. You will advise something, and the person will fall into an even more disastrous state. It is indeed safer to learn than to teach.

    Thank you, Father. But what if your colleagues speak ill of the Patriarch, blaspheming the Church and its hierarchy? How should we react?

    —Someone who speaks ill of the Patriarch does so because he has mental anguish—he does not go to church and finds an excuse for himself. From my experience, I can say that provocative questions can be the beginning of a very serious dialogue about faith. People feel when others speak haughtily with them. The Apostle Paul says that there should be friendliness in communication. He always found kind words to say.

    It often comes to pass that parents come to the faith, but their children have already grown up and it is news to them that their parents suddenly begin to attend church. How should we bring our children to church? Clearly, we must show Christian love in the family, but what about Church discipline for which our children are obviously not ready yet?

    —You should become a church person yourself first. As long as I am not well taught myself, I will not teach others. It is not enough to read one book and come to church once. We should try to understand very well what confession and Communion is. Each one of us has gone through the convert stage and radical period. And when a person calms down a little, he can communicate with his child calmly, without hurting him. I have four children, and I also commit such a sin—they get a lot of criticism. And when our conversion to the faith, our Christianity becomes yet another reason for criticism, it is quite difficult. Children are required to be disciplined at school, in clubs, and now they also have to get up early to go to church on Sundays. It becomes another burden. From my pastoral experience, I know how painful it is for parents themselves. They bring their child to church and tell him to stand still. My daughter once stood at the service, watched and then asked me, “Daddy, I didn’t understand what was going on. First you came out and said something, then Fr. Andrei, and then Fr. Gregory had just a little bit to say, and then he left too.” This is how my child saw it from the outside, so we ourselves should first become Church people and understand well what goes on in church, so that we can explain it to our children. And going to church must be an occasion for joy.

    My mother explained to us from our childhood what went on in church, but did not demand much at a certain stage. It is hard to explain sublime spiritual truths to people. Christ came to us in the world, became one of us out of very great love, so He conveyed information to us in very simple images. The Heavenly Kingdom is a place of the fullness of God’s grace. It will be a Kingdom where Christ will be the King, it will be jubilation. We had a sense of joy in church in our childhood. We didn’t go to church to be rewarded with ice cream. Everyone just felt joy.

    How should I respond to criticism and labels? Should I just stand up and leave, or answer?

    —Criticism can be justified and unjustified. Sometimes we can take criticism as an answer to our prayer to God. Sometimes criticism, especially from our relatives, is God’s answer to our prayer request: We asked for humility and now have a chance to show it. And sometimes people just don’t like something. All people are selfish in many ways; we Christians make efforts not to be selfish, but we don’t always succeed. When a person criticizes someone else, he does it for his own benefit, so that the other person can become more “comfortable” for him. And here you should discern whether it is justified or not. If you are wrong, you need to admit your mistake. There is nothing stronger in man than the ability to admit his mistakes.

    Valentin Perov. Sermon in a Village, 1861 Valentin Perov. Sermon in a Village, 1861     

    And it happens that people impudently violate your boundaries because they want you to be “comfortable” for them. You must be able to defend your boundaries. When the Lord was slapped, He did not turn the other cheek, but asked: Why smitest thou me? (Jn. 18:23). He began to defend His boundaries—He did not remain silent. It is a misconception that Christians must be silent. We cannot tolerate humiliations like the early martyrs. We can keep quiet and be patient, but this is called “deferred revenge”. It is necessary to be able to speak, to respond and say, “I’m sorry, but it is unpleasant for me to listen to these words.” I at first always gave my wife roses, because I in fact, liked them. Then she confessed that she didn’t like roses, she loved alstroemeria (Peruvian lilies). I had acted logically, buying what I liked. Men need this: Women should say everything to them, and not keep silent and then later tell them how they feel. And they should say it not in the form of a rebuke, but simply expressing their true likes and dislikes. It’s the same with colleagues—you should express your opinion and say that it is not very pleasant for you to hear such words about the Patriarch, or it is unpleasant to hear obscene language. But we keep silent, take offense, and then come to the priest for confession. We should learn how to express our feelings in words correctly.



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  • When we’re tired or busy, here’s the way to pray

    At the risk of being simplistic, I want to say something about prayer in a very simple way.

    While doing doctoral studies, I had a professor, an elderly Augustine priest, who in his demeanor, speech, and attitude, radiated wisdom and maturity. Everything about him bespoke integrity. You immediately trusted him, the wise old grandfather of storybooks.

    One day in class he spoke of his own prayer life. As with everything else he shared, there were no filters, only honesty and humility. I don’t recall his exact words, but I remember well the essence of what he said and it has stayed with me for the nearly 40 years since I had the privilege of being in his class.

    Here’s what he shared: Prayer isn’t easy because we’re always tired, distracted, busy, bored, and caught up in so many things that it’s hard to find the time and energy to center ourselves on God for some moments. So, this is what I do: No matter what my day is like, no matter what’s on my mind, no matter what my distractions and temptations are, I am faithful to this: Once a day I pray the Our Father as best I can from where I am at that moment. Inside of everything that’s going on inside me and around me that day, I pray the Our Father, asking God to hear me from inside of all the distractions and temptations that are besetting me. It’s the best I can do. Maybe it’s a bare minimum and I should do more and should try to concentrate harder, but at least I do that. And sometimes it’s all I can do, but I do it every day, as best I can. It’s the prayer Jesus told us to pray.

    His words might sound simplistic and minimalistic. Indeed, the Catholic Church challenges us to make the Eucharist the center of our prayer lives and to make a daily habit of meditation and private prayer. As well, many classical spiritual writers tell us that we should set aside an hour every day for private prayer, and many contemporary spiritual writers challenge us to daily practice centering prayer or some other form of contemplative prayer. Where does that leave our old Augustinian theologian and his counsel that we pray one sincere Our Father each day — as best we can?

    Well, none of this goes against what he so humbly shared. He would be the first to agree that the Eucharist should be the center of our prayer lives, and he would agree as well with both the classical spiritual writers who advise an hour of private prayer a day, and the contemporary authors who challenge us to do some form of contemplative prayer daily, or at least habitually.

    But he would say this: At one of those times in the day (ideally at the Eucharist or while praying the Office of the Church but at least sometime during your day), when you’re saying the Our Father, pray it with as much sincerity and focus as you can muster at the moment (“as best you can”) and know that, no matter your distractions at the moment, it’s what God is asking from you. And it’s enough.

    His advice has stayed with me through the years, and though I say a number of Our Fathers every day, I try, at least in one of them, to pray the Our Father as best I can, fully conscious of how badly I am doing it. What a challenge and what a consolation!

    The challenge is to pray an Our Father each day, as best we can. As we know that prayer is deeply communitarian. Every petition in it is plural — “our,” “we,” “us” — there’s no “I” in the Our Father. Moreover, all of us are priests from our baptism, and inherent in the covenant we made then we are asked daily to pray for others, for the world. For those who cannot participate in the Eucharist daily and for those who do not pray the Office of the Church, praying the Our Father is your Eucharistic prayer, your priestly prayer for others.

    And this is the consolation: none of us is divine. We’re all incurably human, which means that many times, perhaps most times, when we’re trying to pray, we’ll find ourselves beset with everything from tiredness, to boredom, to impatience, to planning tomorrow’s agenda, to sorting through the hurts of the day, to stewing about who we’re angry at, to dealing with fantasies. Our prayer seldom issues forth from a pure heart but normally from a very earthy one. But, and this is the point, its very earthiness is also its real honesty. Our restless, distracted heart is also our existential heart and is the existential heart of the world. When we pray from there, we are (as the classical definition of prayer would have it) lifting mind and heart to God.

    Try, each day, to pray one sincere Our Father! As best you can!

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  • Metropolitan Tikhon (OCA) to concelebrate with Metropolitan Onuphry in western Ukraine

    Chernivtsi, Chernivtsi Province, Ukraine, May 30, 2024

    Photo: Facebook Photo: Facebook     

    The primate of the Orthodox Church in America, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon of Washington and All America and Canada, will concelebrate with the primate of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church, His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry of Kiev and All Ukraine, in western Ukraine later this week.

    The Ukrainian Orthodox Diocese of Chernivtsi and Bukovina “awaits the visit of the primate of the Orthodox Church in America on June 1–2, 2024. Solemn services will be held in the Cathedral of the Descent of the Holy Spirit in Chernivtsi, with the participation of both primates.”

    The Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in America OCA rejects recognition of Ukrainian schismatic church, continues to support, recognize only Met. OnuphryThe Holy Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA) released an archpastoral letter yesterday, January 28, concerning the Ukrainian crisis.

    “>formally rejects communion with the schismatics of the “Orthodox Church in America,” recognizing only the canonical UOC under Met. Onuphry.

    The Ukrainian primate was the honored guest at the OCA’s 18th All-American Council in Metropolitan Onufry recalls St. Tikhon’s ministry during banquet addressMission must be both internal and external, said His Beatitude, Metropolitan Onufry of Kyiv and All Ukraine during the formal banquet during the 18th All-American Council on Thursday evening, July 23, 2015. The Holy Spirit, he said, guides us in understanding that mission is “who we are and what we do” and challenges us to be good “examples of holiness.”

    “>July 2015.

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