Month: February 2008

Fathers, PNCC

February 29 – St. Andrew of Crete from the Great Canon of Repentance

Attend, O heaven, and I will speak; O earth, give ear to a voice repenting to God and singing praises to Him.

Attend to me, O God my Saviour, with Thy merciful eye, and accept my fervent confession.

I have sinned above all men, I alone have sinned against Thee. But as God have compassion, O Saviour, on Thy creature.

Having formed by my pleasure-loving desires the deformity of my passions, I have marred the beauty of my mind. A storm of passions besets me, O compassionate Lord. But stretch out Thy hand to me too, as to Peter.

I have stained the coat of my flesh, and soiled what is in Thy image and likeness, O Saviour. I have darkened the beauty of my soul with passionate pleasures, and my whole mind I have reduced wholly to mud.

I have torn my first garment which the Creator wove for me in the beginning, and therefore I am lying naked.

I have put on a torn coat, which the serpent wove for me by argument, and I am ashamed.

The tears of the harlot, O merciful Lord, I too offer to Thee. Be merciful to me, O Saviour, in Thy compassion.

I looked at the beauty of the tree, and my mind was seduced; and now I lie naked, and I am ashamed.

All the demon-chiefs of the passions have plowed on my back, and long has their tyranny over me lasted. — Troparia from Ode 2, Monday of the First Week of Lent

Fathers, PNCC

February 28 – St. Andrew of Crete from the Great Canon of Repentance

Where shall I begin to lament the deeds of my wretched life? What first-fruit shall I offer, O Christ, for my present lamentation? But in Thy compassion grant me release from my falls.

Come, wretched soul, with your flesh, confess to the Creator of all. In future refrain from your former brutishness, and offer to God tears in repentance.

Having rivaled the first-created Adam by my transgression, I realize that I am stripped naked of God and of the everlasting kingdom and bliss through my sins.

Alas, wretched soul! Why are you like the first Eve? For you have wickedly looked and been bitterly wounded, and you have touched the tree and rashly tasted the forbidden food.

The place of bodily Eve has been taken for me by the Eve of my mind in the shape of a passionate thought in the flesh, showing me sweet things, yet ever making me taste and swallow bitter things.

Adam was rightly exiled from Eden for not keeping Thy one commandment, O Savior. But what shall I suffer who am always rejecting Thy living words? — Troparia from Ode 1, Monday of the First Week of Lent

Fathers, PNCC

February 27 – St. Ambrose of Milan from Exposition of the Christian Faith

Is He then not good, Who has shown me good things? Is He not good, Who when six hundred thousand of the people of the Jews fled before their pursuers, suddenly opened the tide of the Red Sea, an unbroken mass of waters?—”so that the waves flowed round the faithful, and were walls to them, but poured back and overwhelmed the unbelievers.

Is He not good, at Whose command the seas became firm ground for the feet of them that fled, and the rocks gave forth water for the thirsty? so that the handiwork of the true Creator might be known, when the fluid became solid, and the rock streamed with water? That we might acknowledge this as the handiwork of Christ, the Apostle said: “And that rock was Christ.

Is He not good, Who in the wilderness fed with bread from heaven such countless thousands of the people, lest any famine should assail them, without need of toil, in the enjoyment of rest?—”so that, for the space of forty years, their raiment grew not old, nor were their shoes worn, a figure to the faithful of the Resurrection that was to come, showing that neither the glory of great deeds, nor the beauty of the power wherewith He has clothed us, nor the stream of human life is made for nought?

Is He not good, Who exalted earth to heaven, so that, just as the bright companies of stars reflect His glory in the sky, as in a glass, so the choirs of apostles, martyrs, and priests, shining like glorious stars, might give light throughout the world.

Not only, then, is He good, but He is more. He is a good Shepherd, not only for Himself, but to His sheep also, “for the good shepherd lays down his life for his sheep.” Aye, He laid down His life to exalt ours—”but it was in the power of His Godhead that He laid it down and took it again: “I have power to lay down My life, and I have power to take it. No man takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself.” — Book II, Chapter 2

Fathers, PNCC

February 26 – St. Ambrose of Milan from Exposition of the Christian Faith

Now this is the declaration of our Faith, that we say that God is One, neither dividing His Son from Him, as do the heathen, nor denying, with the Jews, that He was begotten of the Father before all worlds, and afterwards born of the Virgin; nor yet, like Sabellius, confounding the Father with the Word, and so maintaining that Father and Son are one and the same Person; nor again, as does Photinus, holding that the Son first came into existence in the Virgin’s womb: nor believing, with Arius, in a number of diverse Powers, and so, like the benighted heathen, making out more than one God. For it is written: “Hear, O Israel: the Lord your God is one God.

For God and Lord is a name of majesty, a name of power, even as God Himself says: “The Lord is My name,” and as in another place the prophet declares: “The Lord Almighty is His name.” God is He, therefore, and Lord, either because His rule is over all, or because He beholds all things, and is feared by all, without difference.

If, then, God is One, one is the name, one is the power, of the Trinity. Christ Himself, indeed, says: “Go ye, baptize the nations in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.” In the name, mark you, not in the names.”

Moreover, Christ Himself says: “I and the Father are One.” “One,” said He, that there be no separation of power and nature; but again, “We are,” that you may recognize Father and Son, forasmuch as the perfect Father is believed to have begotten the perfect Son, and the Father and the Son are One, not by confusion of Person, but by unity of nature. — Book I, Chapter 1

Fathers, PNCC

February 25 – St. Ambrose of Milan from Exposition of the Christian Faith

What shall we do, then? How shall we ascend unto heaven? There, powers are stationed, principalities drawn up in order, who keep the doors of heaven, and challenge him who ascends. Who shall give me passage, unless I proclaim that Christ is Almighty? The gates are shut,—”they are not opened to any and every one; not every one who will shall enter, unless he also believes according to the true Faith. The Sovereign’s court is kept under guard.

Suppose, however, that one who is unworthy has crept up, has stolen past the principalities who keep the gates of heaven, has sat down at the supper of the Lord; when the Lord of the banquet enters, and sees one not clad in the wedding garment of the Faith, He will cast him into outer darkness, where is weeping and gnashing of teeth, if he keep not the Faith and peace.

Let us, therefore, keep the wedding garment which we have received, and not deny Christ that which is His own, Whose omnipotence angels announce, prophets foretel, apostles witness to, even as we have already shown above. — Book IV, Chapter 2

Fathers, PNCC

February 24 – St. John Chrysostom from Homilies on Romans

For while we were yet without strength, Christ in due time died for the ungodly. For scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet pervadenture for a good man some would even dare to die. But God commends His love towards us.

Now what he is saying is somewhat of this kind. For if for a virtuous man, no one would hastily choose to die, consider your Master’s love, when it is not for virtuous men, but for sinners and enemies that He is seen to have been crucified—”which he says too after this, “In that, if when we were sinners Christ died for us.”

Much more then, being now justified by His Blood, we shall be saved from wrath through Him. For if, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by His life.

And what he has said looks indeed like tautology, but it is not to any one who accurately attends to it. Consider then. He wishes to give them reasons for confidence respecting things to come. And first he gives them a sense of shame from the righteous man’s decision, when he says, that he also “was fully persuaded that what God had promised He was able also to perform;” and next from the grace that was given; then from the tribulation, as sufficing to lead us into hopes; and again from the Spirit, whom we have received. Next from death, and from our former viciousness, he makes this good. And it seems indeed, as I said, that what he had mentioned was one thing, but it is discovered to be two, three, and even many more. First, that “He died:” second, that it was “for the ungodly;” third, that He “reconciled, saved, justified” us, made us immortal, made us sons and heirs. It is not from His Death then only, he says, that we draw strong assertions, but from the gift which was given unto us through His Death. And indeed if He had died only for such creatures as we be, a proof of the greatest love would what He had done be! but when He is seen at once dying, and yielding us a gift, and that such a gift, and to such creatures, what was done casts into shade our highest conceptions, and leads the very dullest on to faith. For there is no one else that will save us, except He Who so loved us when we were sinners, as even to give Himself up for us. Do you see what a ground this topic affords for hope? For before this there were two difficulties in the way of our being saved; our being sinners, and our salvation requiring the Lord’s Death, a thing which was quite incredible before it took place, and required exceeding love for it to take place. But now since this has come about, the other requisites are easier. For we have become friends, and there is no further need of Death. — Homily 9

Homilies,

The Third Sunday of Lent

—We no longer believe because of your word;
for we have heard for ourselves,
and we know that this is truly the savior of the world.—

There are two kinds of rock, igneous and sedimentary — no wait, wrong lesson.

There are two kinds of rock mentioned in today’s readings.

The first is the sort of rock the represents hardness of heart. The Jewish people had seen God’s power. They saw Moses strike the sea – and it parted. They saw the cloud and the fire that protected them from the Egyptians. They saw the exercise of God’s might. Not too long after they said: ‘God, what god…’

I’m hungry, I’m thirsty, I can’t see God, God’s not entertaining me. Their hardness of heart was a chronic condition, a condition all of us share. I want, why doesn’t God provide?

The psalmist captures that hardness if heart when he sings:

—Harden not your hearts as at Meribah,
as in the day of Massah in the desert,—¨Where your fathers tempted me;
they tested me though they had seen my works.——¨

That hardness of heart, those stony hearts, were confronted by the Rock of Ages. God showed that the rock in Horeb could bring forth water. Even a rock could bring forth life. Did the rock do it alone? No.

The rock that brought forth water needed two things. It needed God’s power and a faithful servant – Moses.

I will be standing there in front of you on the rock in Horeb.
Strike the rock, and the water will flow from it

There is an important lesson for us in this.

We are human – and our hearts are hard, dissatisfied, filled with doubt. Regardless, our hard hearts can bring forth springs of life. To do so we need God’s power. We need to acknowledge that power. We have to take that all important step and recognize that God is the center of our lives, of the world, of the universe, of all that exists. Once we have recognized God’s proper place in our lives we must make every effort to fashion ourselves into faithful servants.

Of course we are blessed because we have the Holy Church, as guide and support in proclaiming our faith in God and in fashioning ourselves into His faithful servants. With our commitment, and the Church’s guidance and help, we too will bring forth springs of life giving water.

The Letter to the Romans clearly shows that our hearts will be changed in our acceptance of God:

And hope does not disappoint,
because the love of God has been poured out into our hearts
through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.

Because of God’s love, because of a love so great that God Himself would die for us, we have been saved.

God proves his love for us
in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us.

Brothers and sisters,

We have hearts of stone. Those stone hearts will be ground to powder, worn down by a love so great that we cannot help but be changed. God promises us that He Himself will give us hearts made for love. The Prophet Ezekiel tells us that God promised:

I will give them an undivided heart and will put a new spirit in them;—¨
I will remove from them their heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh.—¨
Then they will follow my decrees and be careful to keep my laws.
They will be—¨my people, and I will be their God.

Friends,

Jesus came to give us hearts of flesh. He came and He fulfilled all that was promised. He gives us His word, His power to forgive, and His body and blood. All this so that we will recognize this simple truth:

—whoever drinks the water I shall give will never thirst;
the water I shall give will become in him
a spring of water welling up to eternal life.——¨

We need to drink of Christ – who will destroy our hard hearts. We need to drink of Christ, so that we may: worship the Father in Spirit and truth.

When our hearts are changed, when our hearts yield God’s message, when they proclaim God’s word, we can be sure that those who hear us will say:

—We no longer believe because of your word;
for we have heard for ourselves,
and we know that this is truly the savior of the world.—

That will be the ultimate victory. Let us begin on the path today. Accept the Rock of Ages, the Christ who gives us living water. Then go out, as faithful servants, proclaiming His Gospel. Let our hearts bring living water to all we meet.

Amen.

Fathers, PNCC

February 23 – St. Polycarp from the Epistle to the Philippians

For I trust that you are well versed in the Sacred Scriptures, and that nothing is hid from you; but to me this privilege is not yet granted. It is declared then in these Scriptures, “Be angry, and sin not,” and, “Let not the sun go down upon your wrath.” Happy is he who remembers this, which I believe to be the case with you. But may the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ Himself, who is the Son of God, and our everlasting High Priest, build you up in faith and truth, and in all meekness, gentleness, patience, long-suffering, forbearance, and purity; and may He bestow on you a lot and portion among His saints, and on us with you, and on all that are under heaven, who shall believe in our Lord Jesus Christ, and in His Father, who “raised Him from the dead.” Pray for all the saints. Pray also for kings, and potentates, and princes, and for those that persecute and hate you, and for the enemies of the cross, that your fruit may be manifest to all, and that you may be perfect in Him. — Chapter 12

Fathers, PNCC

February 22 – St. Polycarp from the Epistle to the Philippians

Stand fast, therefore, in these things, and follow the example of the Lord, being firm and unchangeable in the faith, loving the brotherhood, and being attached to one another, joined together in the truth, exhibiting the meekness of the Lord in your intercourse with one another, and despising no one. When you can do good, defer it not, because “alms delivers from death.” Be all of you subject one to another “having your conduct blameless among the Gentiles,” that you may both receive praise for your good works, and the Lord may not be blasphemed through you. But woe to him by whom the name of the Lord is blasphemed! Teach, therefore, sobriety to all, and manifest it also in your own conduct. — Chapter 10

Fathers, PNCC

February 21 – St. Polycarp from the Epistle to the Philippians

Let us then continually persevere in our hope, and the earnest of our righteousness, which is Jesus Christ, “who bore our sins in His own body on the tree,” “who did no sin, neither was guile found in His mouth,” but endured all things for us, that we might live in Him. Let us then be imitators of His patience; and if we suffer for His name’s sake, let us glorify Him. For He has set us this example in Himself, and we have believed that such is the case. — Chapter 8