Questions and answers about Holy Week, the end of Great Lent, Lazarus Saturday & Palm Sunday.
Category: Great Lent
St Mary of Egypt. Two ways to learn to love. Audio Homily 2010.
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Fifth Sunday of Great Lent – St Mary of Egypt
This kind cannot come forth by anything but by prayer and fasting.
Without labor you can’t be saved.
This kind cannot come forth by anything but by prayer and fasting.[1] So we read last week. What is this kind that cannot come forth? The demoniac boy was made by the demons to fall into fire and water, the fire being impurity – the lusts of the flesh, all manner of anger, meanness, murder and strife, envy, and all other such things. And the water means a distraction with worldly things – avarice, desire for things, distraction. Fire and water: this kind comes out not but by prayer and fasting.
But today we see indeed, that this kind will come out – if prayer and fasting and labor are applied. We see this because we have the example, the spectacle, before us of holy mother Mary of Egypt …
Reflections on the Life of St Mary of Egypt.
On this Wednesday, we read the life of St Mary of Egypt, along with the entire Great Canon of St Andrew of Crete. We always do this service (matins with the Great Canon) the Fifth Wednesday of Great Lent ( puff, rtf) the week preceding the Sunday of St Mary of Egypt.
The reading of the life of St Mary of Egypt has always been intensely personal for me. I have actually been the one reading it for fifteen years now, but it was personal when I heard it read. It is the story of OUR redemption – what is wrong with us, what we must do, and especially how the grace of God will help us.
This story MUST be personal for every Christian. Different parts of it will touch us in different ways, but the key to understanding this story and getting any benefit with it is to make it personal. …
The Healing of the Demoniac boy. The reason for fasting. Audio Homily 2010
The healing of the demoniac boy, whom the disciples could not heal, explains in microcosm many pillars of the spiritual life. We hear the purpose of life, the reason why we have weak faith and indeed, the reason for any sinfulness in our lives, and what we must do.
The Healing of the Boy with a dumb and deaf spirit
Today is the fourth Sunday of Great Lent and on this day we read about the healing, at the request of his father, of the boy who is possessed of a demon. There are many things to understand about this scripture …
The rest of the homily is a discussion of the meaning of the boy being deaf and dumb, and the fire and the water and very importantly, why we have trouble believing and what we MUST do in order to believe and be free of the fire and the waster.
Old Testament references to the Cross.
During the entire fourth week of Great Lent, the precious cross is a constant subject of the services. … Our hymnology this week is particularly filled with OT references to the cross, some of which may seem obscure to those who are not well versed in the Orthodox understanding of the scriptures and our services.
In the following examples, a hymn for the services of today is quoted, followed by the scriptures it references. …
Once when He descended and confounded the tongues. 4th Week of Great Lent – Thursday Vespers. Gen 10:32 – 11:9
Today we read in Genesis the story of the tower of Babel. In this story, we learn how the human race was scattered over the face of the earth because, in our pride, we wished to build a tall tower reaching unto heaven. Thus, the confusion of our language was a great mercy of God, as it kept us from banding together for evil, so that, scattered abroad, we could learn humility and return to God.
A Christian cannot (should not) think of the expulsion from paradise without thinking of the remedy – the holy Cross.
Likewise, we should not think of the confusion of tongues without thinking of the remedy …
4th Week of Great Lent – Thursday Proverbs are good to read every day.
Evil shall pursue sinners; but good shall overtake the righteous.
(Proverbs 13:21, from the selection Proverbs 13:19 – 14:6, Vespers, 4th Thursday of Great Lent)
Evil shall pursue sinners; but good shall overtake the righteous. (Proverbs 13:21)
The Proverbs are good to read every day. They are good reminders; they help keep us on track. I suppose that they are read during all weekdays in Great Lent precisely because inculcating their wisdom into our daily life enables us to realize the power of the resurrection, which we are pointing to the entire fast. The resurrection is powerful, life changing, but it does not affect everyone. Only those who attempt to change will be affected by it. Many of the changes we must make are elucidated in the Proverbs. …
A sword shall pierce through thy own soul
4th Week of Great Lent – Wednesday Matins, Stavrotheotokion
The “Stavrotheotokion” is a hymn about the cross and the Theotokos (“Stavros” = Greek for Cross). Many of them are found in the services for Wednesday and Friday. They generally focus on the experiences and suffering of the Theotokos when her son was on the cross, and are a rich source of theology about the cross and the incarnation. Basically all the hymns about the Theotokos are about the incarnation. The Stavrotheotokion in particular is particularly poetic, and often presented as a dialogue between the Mother of God and her son. …