Tag: Christianity

  • Orthodox parishes in western Ukraine seek U.S. protection from religious persecution

    Bukovina, Ukraine, February 6, 2025

    Photo: ​First Cossack     

    Parishes of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church under His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry of Kiev and All Ukraine in the western region of Bukovina are appealing to the U.S. government and other organizations for protection against the persecution of the state and the violent schismatics.

    At least two parishes have made video appeals in the past week, in particular to Vice President JD Vance, who has publicly spoken out against the persecution the UOC and has made religious freedom a major part of his platform.

    Parishioners of the Church of St. Basil in the village of Pidzaharychi in Bukovina appealed to U.S. government agencies about protecting their rights on January 30.

    Four days prior, a group of schismatics from the violent “Orthodox Church of Ukraine,” which enjoys the support of the Ukrainian state, held a meeting and decided to steal the church from the Orthodox Christians, reports the First Cossack.

    The radicals have falsified legal documentation and are also planning a physical attack, while law enforcement authorities stand aside and do nothing—a typical scenario that has played out dozens if not hundreds of times across Ukraine in the past few years.

    Thus, the Orthodox faithful decided to appeal to Vice President JD Vance, who has spoken publicly in defense of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which is experiencing brutal persecution from its own state.

    The parish has also sent evidence of OCU activists’ terror to the U.S. Embassy and international human rights organizations, and Bukovinians living in the U.S. are preparing an appeal to Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

    “A church is for prayer, a church is for love, a church is for peace. It’s God’s house,” the appeal concludes.

    On February 4, the clergy and faithful of the Holy Dormition Church in the village of Dubovtsy, Bukovina also appealed to the U.S. government, the UN, the OSCE, and other human rights organization to protect their rights and to protect their church from the violent schismatics of the “Orthodox Church of Ukraine.”

    The parishioners informed President Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and others about the schismatics’ scheme of falsifying documents to steal their church. They also warn that a violent, forceful seizure could follow, as is happening throughout Ukraine.

    The parishioners emphasize that the rector’s brother, Archpriest Vasily Zelenyuk, serves in America and will personally help ensure the appeal is delivered to the Offices of the President and Vice President.

    The appeal concludes: “We Ukrainians oppose the religious animosity incited by OCU supporters. We love God, our Church, our native Ukraine, and our people. May He bless our land with peace.”

    His Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel of Odessa made his own appeal to President Trump Senior UOC hierarch addresses President Trump in letter of hope and peaceHis Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel of Odessa and Izmail, a permanent member of the Holy Synod of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church, has sent greetings to President Donald Trump.

    “>in November to help protect the canonical UOC.

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    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • The one lie that is unforgivable in Jesus’ eyes

    There is nothing as psychologically and morally dangerous as lying, as denying the truth. Jesus warns us that we can commit a sin that is unforgivable which (in his words) is a blaspheme against the Holy Spirit.

    What is this sin? Why is it unforgivable? And how is it linked to not telling the truth?

    This is the context where Jesus gives us this warning. He had just cast out a demon and some of the people who had witnessed this believed, as a hard religious doctrine, that only someone who came from God could cast out a demon. But they hated Jesus, so seeing him cast out a demon was a very inconvenient truth, so inconvenient in fact that they chose to deny what they had just seen with their own eyes. And so, against everything they knew to be true, they affirmed instead that Jesus had cast out the demon by Beelzebub, the prince of demons. They knew better. They knew that they were denying the truth.

    Jesus’ first response was to try to make them see their lie. He appeals to logic, arguing that if Beelzebub, the prince of demons, is casting out demons, then Satan’s house is divided against itself and will eventually fall. But they persist in their lie. It’s then, in that specific context, that Jesus utters his warning about the danger of committing a sin that cannot be forgiven because it blasphemes the Holy Spirit.

    In essence, what’s in this warning?

    The people whom Jesus addressed had denied a reality that they had just seen with their own eyes because it was too difficult for them to accept its truth. So, they denied its truth, fully aware that they were lying.

    Well, the first lie we tell is not so dangerous because we still know we are lying. The danger is that if we persist in that lie and continue to deny (and lie) we can reach a point where we believe the lie, see it as truth, and see truth as falsehood. Perversion is then seen as virtue, and the sin becomes unforgivable, not because forgiveness is withheld, but because we no longer believe we need forgiveness, nor in fact do we want it or remain open to receiving it.

    Whenever we lie or in any way deny the truth we begin to warp our conscience, and if we persist in this eventually we will (and this is not too strong a phrase) pervert our soul so that for us falsehood looks like truth, darkness looks like light, and hell looks like heaven.

    Hell is never a nasty surprise waiting for a basically honest, happy person. Hell can only be the full flowering of a long, sustained dishonesty where we have denied reality for so long that we now see dishonesty as truth. There isn’t anyone in hell who is repentant and wishing he or she had another chance to live and die in grace. If there is anyone in hell, that person, no matter his or her private misery, is feeling smug and looking with a certain disdain on the naivete of those who are honest, those in heaven.

    And how is that a “blaspheme against the Holy Spirit”?

    In his letter to the Galatians, St. Paul lays out two fundamental ways we can live our lives. We can live outside of God’s spirit. We do that whenever we are living in infidelity, idolatry, hatred, factionalism, and dishonesty. And lying is what takes us there. Conversely, we live inside God’s spirit, the Holy Spirit, whenever we are living in charity, joy, peace, patience, goodness, longsuffering, fidelity, gentleness, and chastity. And we live inside these whenever we are honest. Thus, whenever we lie, whenever we deny reality, whenever we deny truth, we are (in effect and in reality) stepping outside of God’s spirit, blaspheming that spirit by disdaining it.

    Satan is the prince of lies. That’s why the biggest danger in our world is the amount of lies, disinformation, misinformation, and flat-out denial of reality that’s present most everywhere today — whenever, it seems, we don’t find the truth to our liking. There is nothing more destructive and dangerous to the health of our souls, the possibility of creating community among ourselves, the future of our planet, and our own sanity, than the flat-out denial of the truth of something that has happened.

    When reality is denied; when a fact of history is rewritten to expunge a painful truth; when you are told that something you witnessed with your own eyes didn’t happen; when someone says, the holocaust didn’t happen; when someone says there never was slavery in this country; or when someone says no kids died at Sandy Hook, that doesn’t just dishonor millions of people, it plays on the sanity of a whole culture.

    When something has happened and is subsequently denied, that doesn’t just make a mockery of truth, it plays havoc with our sanity, not least with the one who is telling the lie.

    Oblate of Mary Immaculate Father Ronald Rolheiser is a spiritual writer. Visit www.ronrolheiser.com.

    Source: Angelus News

  • On Sundays

    On the ChurchIt’s only in the Church that the Word of God and His teaching are fully heard; only the Church is the house of the Lord on earth—there the bloodless sacrifice and prayers and hymns are offered.

    “>On the Church

    St. Gabriel, Bishop of ImeretiBishop Gabriel (Kikodze) was born November 15, 1825, in the village of Bachvi, in the western Georgian district of Ozurgeti in Guria. His father was the priest Maxime Kikodze.

    “>St. Gabriel of Imereti was a nineteenth-century Holy Hierarch of the Georgian Orthodox Church. He generously distributed alms to widows, orphans, and all in need; he clothed the naked and buried beggars, having mercy upon the least of the brethren. St. Gabriel was born on November 15, 1825, and reposed in the Lord on January 25, 1896.

    Photo: eparhia-saratov.ru Photo: eparhia-saratov.ru     

    Honor this day as a sacred day. On Sunday, we should serve the Lord alone and do the works of God. Even monks laboring in a monastery, who go to church every day and constantly pray, should also spend Sundays with special reverence and purity. And you, laymen, living in a city or village, may have gone six days without remembering God and being able to fervently pray at all. Do you really want to spend Sunday in worldly hustle and bustle too? If you do this often, you’ll eventually grow completely cold towards God, lose hope in salvation and the Kingdom of God, and earthly cares and sinfulness will completely ensnare you. As a Christian, you should have such a firm desire and need to be at the Sunday services that your heart and conscience give you no rest until you go to church. If the commandments of God aren’t engraved in a man’s heart, and following them hasn’t become his natural inclination and heart’s desire, we can safely say that such a man is no Christian.

    On Sunday morning, when you wake up, pray at home, then go to church. He who goes to bed on time in the evening and rises early in the morning will spend the day fully, joyfully, for the good of his soul. Try to read the passages from the Holy Scriptures appointed for this day, for preparing this way, your soul will most benefit from the divine services. After Liturgy, after having had some lunch, try to do some good and useful deed, even the smallest: Perhaps you know some poor and infirm personk—go help him however you can, but only so that your right hand doesn’t know what your left has done. Perhaps one of your neighbors is sick and grieving—go and comfort him. Perhaps you have some friend who loves to talk about spiritual things—go talk to him about it, make him glad, and thus spend your time in a soul-profiting way. On this day, avoid meeting and talking with those who love idle talk, gossiping, and tattling. In the evening, go to church for Vespers, and so rested physically and refreshed spiritually, give yourself to sleep, so you may begin your six days’ labor and daily cares in the morning. Know also that if you commit even a small sin on Sunday, it will be ten times more severe, for this day belongs to the Lord.

    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • It’s difficult to celebrate Notre Dame like we once did

    Notre Dame football has been a secondary religious experience for many of its boosters, whether they are bona fide alumni or are like me who grew up with rabid Irish Catholic male role models who lived and breathed everything Notre Dame football. 

    Even though they came up short in the National Championship game and will not sit atop the college football universe like the NCAA version of the Colossus of Rhodes, the national attention Notre Dame received feels like old times.

    And by “old” times, I reference an era when Notre Dame’s Catholic identity was entrenched. In recent years it feels like Notre Dame has become increasingly unmoored from its Catholic harbor.

    There are many reasons for this, but none so pertinent as when the school honored then-President Barack Obama as its keynote speaker at its 164th commencement. As an Illinois state senator years earlier, Obama was responsible for overturning a law that protected babies who had survived “botched” abortions. This was disturbing news that a Catholic institution, with what I believed had a secure Catholic identity, could bestow honors on someone comfortable with the idea of a newborn child left to die while medical professionals capable of saving that life go about their other duties.

    Like many once prominent Catholic institutions, Notre Dame has consciously tamped down its “outsider” Catholic identity in favor of a less pronounced Catholicity that the popular culture seems to prefer. The genesis of this phenomenon appeared on the horizon in 1967 when Father Theodore Hesburgh, one of the most influential presidents in Notre Dame’s history, championed the “Land O’Lakes Statement,” which promoted a kind of declaration of independence for intellectual freedom by formally resisting “authority of whatever kind, lay or clerical, external to the academic community itself.”

    Later, when it became obvious that many Catholic colleges across the country were de facto secular institutions, St. Pope John Paul II tried to remedy that with his mechanism, Ex Corde Ecclesiae (“From the Heart of the Church”). But that gentle instruction has been fundamentally ignored by almost every Catholic university, including Notre Dame, since it was first promulgated.

    When it comes to football, Notre Dame was not always what it seemed either. The mythology around its famous players and coaches is carved into the hearts of legions of fans. Its first — and still probably most famous — All-American, George Gipp of “Win One for the Gipper” fame, was a part-time student at best, and an inveterate gambler who wagered in the same manner that got Pete Rose banned from the Baseball Hall of Fame for life. So, even though we might lament that Notre Dame is not now what it used to be, we have to look at ourselves in the mirror and entertain the uncomfortable fact that the school may have never been what it was supposed to be.

    Still, the aura of the Notre Dame football team seems to be one of the last connections between the old and the new. One recent development to celebrate is the tradition brought back by the current football coach: The whole team attends Mass on game day. 

    Maybe three Hail Marys after Mass would have helped against the Ohio State juggernaut they encountered, but God’s ways are not ours.

    With college football being a billion-dollar business, it is hopeful to see someone like Head Coach Marcus Freeman not only understand the importance of faith, but be willing to interrupt the day with worship and the Eucharist. 

    That does not change all the problematic elements that accompany any Catholic college that embraces the separation of Church and school the way Notre Dame has, but I will take little victories where I find them.

    In the last great film of Hollywood icon John Ford’s career, “The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance,” a newspaper editor sums up the plot when the truth of the story is finally revealed. We learn that the actions of the hero, which made him a famous and important man, were not as they seemed. The newspaper man is bitterly disappointed at the truth and won’t print it. When the hero asks why, the newspaper man responds, “This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact … print the legend.” 

    It seems Notre Dame has been printing the legend for a long time.

    Robert Brennan writes from Los Angeles, where he has worked in the entertainment industry, Catholic journalism, and the nonprofit sector.

    Source: Angelus News

  • “I Can’t Pass Over a Miracle in Silence”

    The Pravdolyubov family, descendants of Holy Confessor Archpriest Sergiy PravdoliubovAll the priests in the town of Kasimov, including Fr. Sergiy, were arrested, taken to a forest, and ordered to dig a large trench near the railroad tracks. The clergy were convinced they were digging their own graves.

    “>New Hieroconfessor Sergei Anatolievich Pravdolyubov, had a deep spiritual bond with Fr. John. The New Hieroconfessor Sergei, a representative of an ancient family of priests, had seven children. His two sons, Vladimir and Anatoly, became priests in the Diocese of Ryazan, where their ancestors had served for centuries. It was there in the early 1960s that they met the then Priest John Krestiankin, when he was beginning his ministry in the parishes of the land of Ryazan.

    After Archpriests Anatoly and Vladimir Pravdolyubov, their mother Lidia Dmitrievna, the Hieroconfessor Sergei’s widow, and their sisters Vera and Sophia became acquainted with Archimandrite John (Krestiankin)

    “>Fr. John (Krestiankin). The younger generation of the family was drawn to Fr. John as well. So three generations of the Pravdolyubov family turned to Archimandrite John (Krestiankin) for advice. Among the descendants of Hieroconfessor Sergei who communicated with Fr. John were the famous Moscow Archpriests Mikhail Anatolievich and Sergei Anatolievich Pravdolyubov.

    We offer our readers some stories about Fr. John (Krestiankin) related by some representatives of this wonderful family.

    Fr. John visits Lydia Pravdolyubova Fr. John visits Lydia Pravdolyubova     

    You can’t hide the sun with your hand!

    Archpriest Vladimir Sergeyevich Pravdolyubov (1931–2021), son of Hieroconfessor Sergei. From 1967 to 2004 he was the rector, and until his death, the honorary rector of St. Nicholas Church in Kasimov.

    Archpriest Vladimir Pravdolyubov Archpriest Vladimir Pravdolyubov Before Fr. John’s arrival in the town of Kasimov in the Ryzan region, many people had already known about him as an extraordinary priest. These were the 1960s when Khrushchev’s persecution of the Orthodox Church was at its height. In Kasimov, a very domineering (especially in relation to the clergy) and intelligent woman, Claudia Ivanovna Potapova, worked at the church shop. So we lived as if under siege and expected all sorts of tricks from her. When the rector, Fr. Vasily, retired because of his advanced age, Claudia Ivanovna asked me:

    “Who is the best priest in our diocese? I’ll ask him to come to Kasimov.”

    “Fr. John Krestiankin is the best, but they won’t send him to you.”

    “They will send him here!” Claudia Ivanovna declared confidently.

    Indeed, after a while we learned that Fr. John (Krestiankin) was being transferred to Kasimov.

    Then Claudia Ivanovna got a little scared:

    “They say batiushka is clairvoyant?”

    During his stay in Kasimov—and he served there from January 30 (the feast of the Three Holy Hierarchs according to the old calendar) 1966 to February 2 (the Meeting of the Lord according to the old calendar) 1967—Fr. John renovated the church inside and outside, and the nuns from Letovo sewed vestments of the missing colors.1 These vestments still exist and are called “Fr. John’s vestments”. His spiritual children from Moscow brought fresh flowers for the burial shroud of the Lord. Since then and to this day this custom has been kept at the churches of Kasimov: to adorn the burial shrouds with fresh flowers.

    Despite his previous term in prison, Fr. John acted without regard for the authorities and preached very boldly. I remember phrases about militant atheists from his sermon:

    Once I was hearing confessions during the late Liturgy. One of those who confessed was a woman who had had an abortion. Although she promised that she would not repeat this sin, I had doubts that she sincerely felt the severity of her fall. No sooner had I thought about it than I heard Fr. John’s sermon thundering: “The chalice with the blood of a murdered baby will be given to a mother-murderer to drink!”

    After graduating from the academy, a priest had nowhere to serve for a while and practiced in Kasimov. Once, during the late Liturgy, he was performing the sacrament of Baptism in the caretaker’s room. Suddenly he ran out agitated:

    “Fr. Vladimir, what should I do? The godmother has turned out to be an unbeliever! She came during the Baptism, and I had not asked her about her faith before the Baptism.”

    I followed him to the caretaker’s room and saw a young woman trying not to lose her dignity, but who was clearly confused, and next to her was an angry young priest railing at her:

    “How dare you—an unbeliever!—come to the sacrament of Baptism, and even become a godmother?!”

    Stunned by such an attack, the woman tried to justify herself with official arguments of anti-religious propaganda. In a few words I proved to her the absurdity of her claims and silenced her. Worried over our absence, Fr. John came to the caretaker’s room, got into the matter, realized that both his counterparts had attacked the woman to the point of exhaustion, took her aside and started whispering something in her ear. From what we heard it became clear that he was telling her that she was actually a believer, but she didn’t know it yet.

    I was struck by his extraordinary prayer

    Vera Sergeyevna Pravdolyubova, daughter of the Hieroconfessor Sergei. She suffered from deafness and never married. After the death of her mother, Lidia Dmitrievna, she lived with her sister Sophia Sergeyevna.

    Having arrived in Kasimov, Fr. John behaved with us so simply, as if he were our relative, that he began to come to our place. After some trip he would call the two brothers Fr. Anatoly and Fr. Vladimir to go to our place together. He would say, “Let’s go together to our Mother’s.” And he would say to our mother about himself: “Here is your third son, Mom.” And he talked a lot with his brother-priests at the table.

    On learning about my deafness, Fr. John allowed me to take books to church and follow the service, reading it simultaneously. He gave me a tattered Festal Menaion in a rather small format. I could take several sheets with me to services rather than the whole book. My life became easier at once. To this day I haven’t learned how to pray for two or three hours in a row without books. Before Fr. John, I had not been allowed to take books to church and read at the services. The books still serve me and comfort me greatly.

    Once they were talking about me at the table. Fr. John said:

    “I should marry you off.”

    “What are you talking about! I’m old!”

    “There can be a ‘white,’ or a ‘black’ marriage.”

    Having no inclination for monastic life, even though I was a spinster, I began to refuse, scared. (What if he blesses me for this! What will I do?) The conversations at the head of the table went on, while I was sitting there and (woe to me!!!) thinking: “Black marriage! And what’s he like? Neither ‘black’, nor ‘white’—he is sort of gray!”2 And almost immediately, in response to my thoughts, Fr. John uttered:

    “Be like me for now—gray.”

    And then he repeated it to my sister Sophia:

    “Maybe she didn’t hear—let her be gray for now.”

    And I’ve remained “gray” to this day.

    I also have a very strong and vivid recollection. I would stand among people at the church as I did not hear any services or sermons because of my deafness. Once, during the reading of the Akathist before of the wonderworking Kazan Icon of the Mother of God, I found myself not far from Fr. John. And I was struck by the extraordinariness of his prayer—it was so fervent. This is how Fr. John prayed; it pierced my whole soul and ignited prayer for me.

    One day I told Fr. John:

    “I prepare and write my confessions for hours, but as a result I have fiction.”

    He answered:

    “If we don’t have a lump of gold, then we are happy that we have at least some grains.”

    I said:

    “I’m weeping and weeping. How good it would be if these tears could be turned into tears for my sins! But I’ve shed so many of them for nothing.”

    Fr. John replied:

    “When we don’t have clean water, we take what we have, let it settle, filter it, and purify it as best we can. Won’t God be able to filter your tears to get the tears for your sins?”

    We must be, not seem

    Sophia Sergeyevna Pravdolyubova, a daughter of the Hieroconfessor Sergei. She was very ill, and doctors predicted her imminent death several times. She lived to a very old age, but did not marry. In her final years she cared for her seriously sick sister Vera Sergeyevna.

    I cannot pass over in silence a miracle that occurred to our elder brother, Fr. Anatoly, through the word and prayer of Fr. John. After a massive heart attack, Fr. Anatoly could no longer serve and began to get more and more ill.

    Fr. Anatoly performed the wedding ceremony for all of his children himself. At that time, only the youngest, Seraphim, was single. And Fr. John blessed Fr. Anatoly to perform the wedding ceremony for his youngest son himself. We hoped that Fr. John’s prayers would make Fr. Anatoly feel better, and he would be able to do it. But as time went by, not only did he not get better, he got worse and worse. The wedding was scheduled for late January, and before the feast of the Protection of the Mother of God Fr. Anatoly was doing very poorly. But he was still alive.

    Fr. Anatoly firmly believed, and said more than once that Fr. John’s blessing would surely be fulfilled, and he would certainly marry Seraphim himself. His condition was such that he was not able to perform the service, but nevertheless we began to prepare for the wedding. However, he was getting worse again, and on the eve of the wedding he felt very bad. I was by his side and heard him repeat over and again: “5 Mezhdunarodnaya Street, 5 Mezhdunarodnaya Street”—this is the address of the Pskov-Caves Monastery. Soon Fr. Fyodor, his son, came to him. I went into another room where I had to decorate the cakes. As I was decorating them, tears were flowing down my face. The night passed.

    Fr. Anatoly Pravdolyubov with his children Fr. Anatoly Pravdolyubov with his children   

    The time came, and will difficulty we dressed Fr. Anatoly. We drove the car to the porch and it took us twenty minutes to seat him in it. People gathered at the church, but there was no wedding excitement; rather, sadness reigned in the air. Everyone was aware that they were seeing their batiushka for the last time. Fr. Fyodor betrothed the newlyweds, and Fr. Anatoly crowned them. Our second brother, Fr. Vladimir, stood in the small altar and prayed incessantly. Everything went well. But the miracle continued! Fr. Anatoly was able to sit at the table with the newlyweds and even sing something!

    Our sister Vera was worried that he might die after the wedding, and the newlyweds’ festivity would turn into mourning. But Fr. Anatoly lived for three more weeks, and in accordance with the words of Fr. John: “And then you can say, ‘Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace,’ he passed away on the second day of the feast of the Meeting of the Lord.

    When afterwards I thanked Fr. John for this miracle with Fr. Anatoly, he said, “It’s also his great faith.”

    I want to recall Fr. John’s important words:

    • “We must be, not seem.”

    • “If we know something, we can teach others. Then we must fulfil it!”

    We must endure to the end

    Archpriest Sergei Pravdolyubov with Fr. John Archpriest Sergei Pravdolyubov with Fr. John   

    Archpriest Sergei PravdoliubovPravdoliubov, Sergei, Archpriest

    “>Archpriest Sergei Anatolievich Pravdolyubov (1950–2024), grandson and full namesake of the Hieroconfessor Sergei. From 1990 to 2024 he served as the rector of the Holy Trinity Church in Troitskoye-Golenishchevo in Moscow, a Master of theology, a writer:

    I will never tire of repeating batiushka’s words: “There is not a single person who is equal to another in everything. I’ve lived my whole life and never seen two identical people with similar lives.”

    For me these words have been proven in practice more than once.

    Many people went through our kitchen in Moscow. They would go to the elder in sorrow and trouble and stop overnight with us on the way. Most of them were our numerous relatives. Sitting over a cup of tea and listening to suffering souls, we would begin to imagine together with the travelers what the elder might say. We would start analyzing, weighing up, constructing, guessing, and “predicting” it in detail. A few days later the travelers would return elated and inspired. I would ask them: “How are things?!” And it would turn out that the elder had decided in an absolutely different way! Regardless of how much we had thought—we never guessed anything. Sometimes the elder made the opposite decision. Once I even joked:

    “Why travel so far? Ask me what should be done—and do the opposite!”

    In the 1980s in Pechory, when I was present during conversations with the elder, I noticed that he would say the same thing much more often than before:

    “Patience and more patience. Just patience. We must endure to the end.”

    I was even confused; after all, there are limits to patience. And what if you can’t endure anymore?

    I got wonderful edification from my brother Fr. Mikhail’s trip to Pechory. He and I served as deacons in Moscow, and we had no hope of becoming priests. A few years earlier, Fr. John had blessed another brother of mine, Fr. Seraphim, to go and serve in the Ryazan Diocese. So Fr. Mikhail intended to leave and become a priest in our “native” diocese too. Metropolitan Simon (Novikov) of Ryazan and Kasimov (1972–2003) even offered Fr. Mikhail a church to which he would assign him. All that remained was to receive the elder’s blessing.

    My brother called me and said that he was going to get his blessing to leave Moscow. Following the logic of the previous brother’s blessing, I even felt sad—three brothers would be there, and I alone would stay in Moscow. I had absolutely no doubt that the blessing would be received.

    But my brother came back and astonished me—there was no blessing! “How can it be?!” I thought

    The elder said:

    “You want to burden yourself with a new self-made cross on your own initiative? You can do that, but having replaced the cross given to you by God, you won’t receive His support anymore when you weaken, and then you will fall under the weight of this cross. Be patient and bear the cross that was given to you. Let two brothers serve in the Ryazan Diocese, and two brothers in Moscow.”

    Many years later, when Fr. Mikhail’s son had grown up, we vividly remembered this blessing again. “Is it worth bothering so much for his ordination, parish, or a good position?” No need! The principle here is to learn to understand and accept the will of God. And the Lord Himself will arrange everything by His Providence.

    Take heart and don’t fear!

    Archpriest Mikhail Anatolievich Pravdolyubov (1953–2017), grandson of Hieroconfessor Sergei. From 1979 he served as a deacon, in 1990 he was ordained priest and appointed a cleric of the Church of the Resurrection of Christ in Sokolniki in Moscow, where he served for twenty-seven years until his death.

    Archpriest Mikhail Pravdolyubov Archpriest Mikhail Pravdolyubov Whenever I visited the Pskov-Caves Monastery, I often heard Fr. John talking to people—there were very interesting conversations.

    One of the priests once asked Fr. John if the Chernobyl disaster could be considered apocalyptic and if Chernobyl was the very “star of Wormwood” mentioned in the Revelation (Rev. 8:11)?

    “I would not flatly call the accident at the nuclear power plant a direct fulfillment of the Apocalypse,” Fr. John replied. “We must be very cautious when interpreting the Apocalypse, and it is not without reason that the Church does not accept many of its interpretations. There are commentaries on the Book of Revelations by St. Andrew of Caesarea—they are accepted by the Church and can be read. The others are very dubious!”

    Around the same time, in the mid-1980s, the first disturbance concerning personal identification numbers began. Back then these were still not Taxpayer Personal Identification Numbers (INN), but new pension documents. People were required to fill out some forms and enter a certain number. Some believers started talking about the “seal of the antichrist” and the supposed inadmissibility of filling out such forms. I was constantly asked what the attitude of Orthodox towards it should be. I believed there was nothing special about it, but I wanted to know Fr. John’s opinion. On one of my trips to Pechory I explained in detail to Fr. John everything that was confusing people. Fr. John personally replied to me that the faithful should not be afraid of any numbers. Numbers are everywhere: on the clock, on documents, on the pages of books, and so on! Why be afraid of them? It is not numbers that we must fear, but the sins that we commit, especially the temptations of the end times.3 If we easily succumb to these temptations, if we sin easily, then the spirit of the antichrist is already working in us, and imperceptibly for us the seal of the antichrist, which everyone is so afraid of, may already be on us!

    I also asked Fr. John about the priesthood: How should we deal with the acute problem that was arising in many parishes everywhere—the problem when priests consider themselves entitled to keep their parishioners tied to them and forbid them to go to confession to another priest? Fr. John replied as follows:

    “Everything that makes up a person—reason, will, conscience, and spiritual freedom—should never be violated. If it is disrupted, disease begins. As the Gospel says: Christ healed the blind, the deaf, the lame, the lepers… [Fr. John paused and looked straight into my eyes] and the possessed. Yes, this is a disease too, a spiritual one. And the onset of this disease is when a person loses his own will, subordinating it to the will of another person. Then conscience is hardly able to say anything to him—it is drowned out as a result of shirking a one’s own responsibility before God and placing it on someone else.”

    In the late 1980s, Fr. John referred to our times as those of bloodless martyrdom.

    “You are bloodless martyrs,” he used to say. “And later it will be even harder. Your time is harder than ours, and I can only sympathize with you. But take heart and don’t fear! Now there is confusion, turmoil and mix-ups everywhere, and it will get even worse: perestroika, then roll calls, then shooting. There will come a period of severe spiritual hunger, although there will be plenty of food on on the table.”

    His soul was big enough for everybody

    Lydia Anatolievna Pravdolyubova, grand-daughter of Hieroconfessor Sergei. A singer and a choir director, for many years she had obediences at the Church of the Theophany of the former Theophany Monastery in Kitai-gorod, Moscow.

    Fr. John was loved and venerated. Even then, in the 1960s, many people flocked to him from everywhere with their sorrows and miseries. They came at any time day or night. He received everybody, despite his poor health and lack of free time. We marveled how he managed to find enough energy.

    Resolving someone’s perplexity, he used to say:

    “A wise man was asked three questions: What is the most important time in our life? Who is the most important person in our life? What is the most important thing to do? The answer was as follows: The most important time in life is the present moment, because the past has gone and the future has not yet come. The most important person in life is the one who is in front of you now and to whom you can do either good or evil. The most important thing in life is to give everything that can be given to the person in front of you at this very moment.”

    This is what Fr. John did all his life.

    In Kasimov, all important events and all Church issues were discussed and resolved by the “council” of priests. At that time, everyone would gather in the house: my grandmother— Hieroconfessor Sergei’s widow, with my father’s sisters (Aunt Vera and Aunt Sophia), Fr. Vladimir and his family, and my father, Fr. Anatoly, with our mother—and sometimes we, their children, with them. Fr. John used to say, “We have one soul.” He called my grandmother “Matushka”, and called my father jokingly and lovingly, “an indispensable member of the Synod.” We, the children, were present at the “Synod meetings”, watched and listened to their conversations quietly. These were big, highly informative conversations that enthralled us children. We listened, watched and absorbed everything, trying to understand the greatest event for us—Fr. John.

    Fr. John was full of love, his soul was large enough for everybody, and he was always bright and joyful. But he was at the same time always extremely collected and inwardly strict. It was as if he always possessed knowledge of higher spheres inaccessible to us, as if he always reverently and carefully abode in them, while remaining attentive and sincerely open. He heard these spheres continuously—he was all hearing. He was afraid of disturbing this state of hearing with anything, and he compared all his actions with this state. He “walked before God”.

    Once my sister Elena and I were at the Sunday Vigil at the monastery, which was celebrated by Fr. John. It is difficult to describe the state that we experienced at that service. Fr. John came to the litiya as the officiating priest and he stood in the center this way—in a mantiya, a klobuk, and, by custom, raising his head slightly (like a sensitive “radar”, he would face the heavens, the Source, as if he were so aimed and directed towards It that it was hard for him to stay on earth). His hand was on his chest, as if he carefully and reverently, with awe, were keeping the precious vessel of his heart—the receptacle and abode of the Holy Spirit. This time his face was so strict, focused, and expressed such self-absorption, presence, and mystery that it was scary to look at him. Because it seemed that what Fr. John so longed for with all his heart, what he was turned towards by all his love, what “sucked” him up from the earth—even in external manifestations—was present here. Fr. John seemed to be a co-partaker in a mystery. He was standing in front of Someone and with Someone. He wasn’t directed anywhere anymore—everything was already here. We felt fearful. We were aware of the extraordinariness of the moment and rejoiced with awe that this element of Heaven had touched our souls—the one in which Fr. John already lived and performed his ministry.

    I would also like to add that Fr. John was a participant in the mysterious life of the heart. He saw the heart through the power of God, guiding it by the power of God. His cell was an “x-ray room”. And also, as Fr. John joked, the only “forced air (artificial ventilation) room”. You could even say “ICU”. A place where you were brought back to life and “spread your wings”. And not only his cell; there are no barriers for people of God. They know your heart always and everywhere.

    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • Pope: Like Mary, respond to God's love with action

    Christians are called to follow Mary’s example by responding to God’s love with action, reaching out to others instead of withdrawing from the world, Pope Francis said.

    Reflecting on Mary’s visit to her pregnant cousin Elizabeth after learning that she will bring the Messiah into the world, he said that “this young daughter of Israel does not choose to protect herself from the world, does not fear the dangers and judgments of others, but goes out to meet others.”

    The pope began his general audience in the Paul VI Audience Hall Feb. 5 by apologizing for being unable to read his catechesis due to a lingering cold, and explained that an aide, Msgr. Pierluigi Giroli, would read his prepared text.

    “It is difficult for me to speak,” Pope Francis said before ceding to the floor to his aide. However, he did read the summary of his catechesis in Spanish and spoke without clear signs of difficulty.

    In his prepared text, the pope said that moved by love, Mary goes out to meet Elizabeth, who is “an elderly woman who welcomes, after a long wait, an unexpected pregnancy, tiring to confront at her age.”

    “But the Virgin also goes to Elizabeth to share faith in the God of the impossible and hope in the fulfillment of his promises,” he said.

    Even after Elizabeth recognizes the significance of Mary’s pregnancy, saying, “Most blessed are you among women and blessed is the fruit of your womb,” Mary responds by speaking “not of herself but of God and raises a praise full of faith, hope and joy,” Pope Francis said.

    Mary’s response to Elizabeth, recited today as the Magnificat prayer, “resounds daily in the church during the prayer of vespers,” the pope noted.

    The Magnificat, filled with references from the Old Testament and recalling Israel’s liberation from Egypt, is “imbued with a memory of love that ignites the present with faith and illuminates the future with hope,” he said.

    “Mary sings the grace of the past but is the woman of the present who carries the future,” Pope Francis wrote in his message.

    Christians, he said, should “ask the Lord for the grace to know how to wait for the fulfillment of all his promises; and to help us welcome Mary’s presence in our lives.”

    At the end of the audience, the pope took the microphone to ask that people remember the many countries suffering from the effects of war: “martyred Ukraine, Israel, Jordan — so many countries that are suffering there — let us remember the displaced people of Palestine, and let us pray for them.”

    A transcript of the pope’s remarks published by the Vatican listed Palestine in the place of Jordan among the countries he referenced.

    Pope Francis met Feb. 3 with Jordan’s Queen Rania as part of a Vatican summit on the rights of children.

    Source: Angelus News

  • St. Tikhon’s gift to Minneapolis cathedral returns after two-year restoration

    Minneapolis, February 5, 2025

    The Minneapolis Deliverer Icon was gifted by St. Tikhon in the early 20th century     

    An historic icon of the Theotokos that was gifted more than 100 years ago by St. Tikhon of Moscow during his time as head of the North American Mission has returned to the Orthodox Church in America’s St. Mary’s Cathedral in Minneapolis after undergoing two years of professional restoration work.

    The clergy and faithful gathered on Wednesday, January 29, to formally welcome the beloved Deliverer Theotokos of Minneapolis back to the church, reports the Diocese of the Midwest.

    The icon was originally painted at St. Panteleimon’s Monastery on Mt. Athos.

        

    Upon arrival of the icon at the cathedral, an akathist to the Deliverer Theotokos and Vespers for the feast of the Three Holy Hierarchs were celebrated, with hundreds of faithful venerating the icon.

    “This icon represents a connection to our historical past, while also providing for the faithful an important spiritual connection to our Mother, the Most Holy Theotokos,” said Mitered Archpriest Andrew Morbey, Dean of St. Mary’s Cathedral.

    The icon has been treasured by the cathedral community since it was gifted by St. Tikhon, but over the past quarter century, its condition severely deteriorated, requiring professional restoration by artisans at the Midwest Art Conservation Center in Minneapolis.

    “For Orthodox believers in Minneapolis, the protection of the Mother of God is something very powerful in their lives,” Father Morbey said, adding, “They understand the importance of turning to the Mother of God in prayer and love as our heavenly intercessor. Now this icon is restored and present for all to venerate and pray before, knowing that the Theotokos hears our prayers.”

    To maintain its new condition, the icon has been placed in a temperature-controlled case, which will be set in a large kiot that is being built by parishioners.

    A new akathist has been composed specifically in honor of the Minneapolis Deliverer Icon.

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    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • LA Archdiocese helps produce pope’s prayer video on vocations

    Pope Francis’s monthly prayer video for this month focusing on religious vocations features a priest and several women religious from Los Angeles.

    The Archdiocese of Los Angeles’ digital team helped produce this month’s “The Pope Video” in collaboration with the Pope’s Worldwide Prayer Network, which broadcasts Pope Francis’ monthly prayer intentions. February 2025’s prayer intention centers on helping and accompanying young people in their discernment of possible religious life.

    This is the third time the LA Archdiocese’s digital team has helped produce the videos, which are released each month worldwide in multiple languages. 

    February’s prayer intention reads: “Let us pray that the ecclesial community might welcome the desires and doubts of those young people who feel a call to serve Christ’s mission in the priesthood and religious life.”

    In the latest video, Pope Francis reflects on his own journey as a youth into discovering his call to become a priest. The video also features rarely seen photos of Pope Francis in his youth before he answered the call to priesthood.

    “When I was 17 years old, I was a student and was working,” Pope Francis said. “I had my own plans. I wasn’t thinking at all of being a priest. But one day, I went into the church — and God was there, waiting for me.”

    Similar to how he was helped as a youth to recognize his calling, Pope Francis urged others to help young people realize what God’s plan is for them.

    “God still calls young people even today, sometimes in ways we can’t imagine,” he said. “Sometimes we don’t hear because we’re too busy with our own things, our own plans, even with our own things in the Church.

    “If we accompany their journeys, we’ll see how God is doing new things with them. And we’ll be able to welcome his call in ways that better serve the Church and the world today. Let’s trust young people! And, above all, let’s trust God for he calls everyone.”

    Footage in the video includes Los Angeles-area people and locations showing local clergy and religious accompanying young people in religious discernment.

    Some scenes were filmed at Christ the King Church in Hollywood and the Archdiocesan Catholic Center in LA’s Koreatown area. Among those shown are Father Louie Reyes, Associate Director of Vocations for the archdiocese, Sister Rosalia Meza, V.D.M.F., the archdiocese’s Senior Director of Religious Education, and the Carmelite Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart in Los Angeles.

    “Our God is a God who takes the lives and gifts of young people seriously,” said Los Angeles Archbishop José H. Gómez in a statement. “The Church’s mission is to walk with young people to help them grow in their faith and to work to build this world into the Kingdom that God wants for his people.”

    The archdiocese previously produced Pope videos in May 2024 on religious formation, and in July 2024 on pastoral care for the sick.

    “The Pope Video” can be seen on the platform’s website and YouTube channel, as well as on social media on Facebook, Twitter/X, and Instagram.

    Source: Angelus News

  • Scotland: Help Romanian parish purchase its own building—fundraiser through late March

    Aberdeen, Scotland, February 5, 2025

    Photo: parohiaaberdeen.org.uk     

    A Romanian Orthodox parish serving northeast Scotland is currently in the midst of a fundraiser towards the purchase of its own building.

    The Sts. Joachim and Anna and the Holy Cross parish has been looking for its own building in Aberdeen to worship in for many years—“a sacred place where our community can come together, grow, and glorify God in faith,” writes the parish site.

    And after much prayer, it found the Ruthrieston West Church, a permanently closed Presbyterian church that is available for $437,000 (£350,000). The space consists of a place of worship, church hall, adjacent rooms, storage spaces, bathrooms, kitchen, a tennis court, and green space.

    According to Fr. Andrei Dosoftei’s announcement, the parish has already raised $125,000 (£100,000), and they hope to raise the rest by the end of March. The goal is to also build a Romanian Community Center that will serve for Sunday School and other activities.

    Contributions can be made directly to the church’s bank account:

    Bank: HSBC
    Account name: The Romanian Orthodox Church Aberdeen
    Sort Code: 40-01-25
    Account number: 61489631

    For international transfers:
    IBAN:
    GB95HBUK40012561489631
    BIC: HBUKGB4115T

    For UK taxpayers, see the parish site for information on how to add 25p for every £1 donated at no extra cost to you.

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    Source: Orthodox Christianity

  • Top NASA scientist talks faith and science at USC ‘Gold Mass’

    In an age when the natural and the divine are usually dismissed as incompatible, what’s a scientist supposed to do with their faith? 

    The dilemma is nothing new — and nothing to be afraid of — for Jonathan Lunine, Ph.D., the chief scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab Chief in Pasadena, a convert to the Catholic faith and co-founder of the Society of Catholic Scientists

    “It takes courage to witness to your faith, especially in situations where the expectation is that the secular point of view is the right point of view,” said Lunine at a Jan. 28 lecture at the University of Southern California Caruso Catholic Center.

    Lunine, a self-described “cradle astronomer,” gave the talk after Los Angeles’ first “Gold Mass for Catholics in the Sciences” celebrated by Archbishop José H. Gomez at USC’s Our Savior Church.

    The event, held to mark the 800th anniversary of the birth of St. Thomas Aquinas, is part of a broader effort to empower Catholic thinkers working in academic and professional circles increasingly dominated by secularist thought. Two LA-area organizations that are part of that effort, the Nova Forum for Intellectual Thought and the Southern California chapter of the Society of Catholic Scientists, partnered to sponsor the Gold Mass. 

    In Lunine’s talk, the lifelong astronomer recounted his journey from Judaism to Methodism in his younger years, before his conversion to Catholicism after encounters with the Jesuit fathers and brothers working in the Vatican Observatory group.

    “Gradually, my stubborn heart was moved,” Lunine said. “I just suddenly realized that it was time to stop running from the one who had comforted me 33 years earlier.”

    Lunine’s remarks focused on the need to inspire young people to embrace their faith alongside their scientific achievements, with various examples of Catholic scientists who did so throughout history. He also argued that, given the varied perceptions of the link between science and faith, the field needed to recognize the limitations of what science can reveal. 

    “However close science might seem to get to Thomistic philosophy, or however far it might get, science can never be used to prove or disprove the existence of God,”  Dr. Lunine said.

    At the Mass, celebrated on St. Thomas Aquinas’ feast day, Archbishop Gomez pointed to the 13th-century saint’s teachings as a source of encouragement for Catholics looking for answers in both faith and science. 

    Archbishop José H. Gomez celebrates the Gold Mass for Scientists at Our Savior Parish at the University of Southern California on Jan. 28, the 800th birthday of St. Thomas Aquinas. (Guillermo A. Luna)

    “We can know the beauty of the world that God created, we can unlock the deepest secrets of nature, we can make discoveries that change lives and open new possibilities for the human family,” said Archbishop Gomez in his homily. “Thomas understood that all creation is the work of the one Creator, from the tiniest organism to the furthest planets in the solar system.” 

    The tradition of Masses honoring professional fields goes back to the 13th century, when the first Red Mass was celebrated for lawyers and lawmakers. The first Gold Mass was held in 2016 by the Society of Catholic Scientists in Boston.

    Uniting together in prayer and celebration, Nova Forum, founded in 2020 at the University of Southern California, and the Society of Catholic Scientists, which began in 2016, brought together guests from across the Southern California area, including scientists from the University of California, Los Angeles, University of California, Irvine, and Caltech. 

    “There still remains [a] residue of mystery that can never be perfectly measured, perfectly captured, perfectly mastered,” said USC professor and Nova Forum founder David Albertson in opening remarks at a reception after the Mass. “That experience of the intellect being overwhelmed in its finitude is also an experience of the mystery of God that’s found in the exploration of the cosmos, in the sciences.”

    There is hope for future generations of scientists that find inspiration in Christ’s incarnation, Lunine told the group.

    “I urge those of you pursuing a career in science to embrace it,” said Lunine. “Strive to be your best, do great science, and, at the same time, embrace your faith, open your heart to the God who loves you.”

    author avatar

    Nora Miller is a student at the University of Southern California and a multimedia reporter with Annenberg Media, USC’s student-led multiplatform news media.

    Source: Angelus News