Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Orthodoxy |
CATECHETICAL HOMILY
At the Opening of Holy and Great Lent (2019) + BARTHOLOMEW By God’s mercy Archbishop of Constantinople-New Rome and Ecumenical Patriarch |
May the Grace and Peace of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ be with you
* * * With the grace of God, the giver of
all gifts, we have once again arrived at Holy and Great Lent, the
arena of ascetical struggle, in order to purify ourselves with the
Lord’s assistance through prayer, fasting and humility, as well as
to prepare ourselves for a spiritual experience of the venerable
Passion and the celebration of the splendid Resurrection of Christ
the Savior. In a world of manifold confusion, the
ascetic experience of Orthodoxy constitutes an invaluable spiritual
asset, an inexhaustible source of divine knowledge and human wisdom.
The blessed phenomenon of ascesis, whose spirit pervades our entire
way of life – for “asceticism is Christianity in its entirety” – is
not the privilege of the few or chosen, but an “ecclesial event,” a
communal good, a shared blessing and the common vocation for all
faithful without exception. The ascetical struggles, of course, are
not an end in themselves; the principle that “ascesis exists for the
sake of ascesis” is not valid. The purpose of ascesis is the
transcendence of one’s own will and the “mind of the flesh,” the
transferal of the center of life from individual desire and the
“right,” toward love that “does not seek its own,” in accordance
with the scriptural passage: “Let no one seek his own good, but the
good of the other.” (1 Cor. 10.24) Such is the spirit that prevails
throughout the long historical journey of Orthodoxy. In the New
Miterikon, we encounter an excellent description of this ethos to
renounce “our own” in the name of love: “Some hermits from Scetis
once approached Amma Sarah, who offered them a container with basic
provisions. The elders set aside the good food and consumed the bad.
The righteous Sarah said to them: ‘You are truly monks from Scetis’”[1]
This sensitivity and sacrificial use of freedom is foreign to the
spirit of our age, which identifies freedom with individual
assertions and claims for rights. Contemporary “autonomous” man
would never have consumed the bad food, but only the good, convinced
that in this way he expresses – while authentically and responsibly
employing – individual freedom. This is where the supreme value of
the Orthodox concept of human freedom lies. It is a freedom that
does not demand but shares, does not insist but sacrifices. The
Orthodox believer knows that autonomy and self-sufficiency do not
liberate humanity from the shackles of the ego, of self-realization
and self-justification. The freedom “for which Christ has set us
free” (Gal. 5.1) mobilizes our creative capacity and is fulfilled as
rejection of self-enclosure, as unconditional love and communion of
life. The Orthodox ascetical ethos does not
know division and dualism; it does not reject life, but rather
transforms it. The dualistic vision and denial of the world is not a
Christian concept. Genuine asceticism is luminous and charitable. It
is a characteristic of Orthodox self-conscience that the period of
fasting is permeated by the joy of the Cross and the Resurrection.
Moreover, the ascetic struggle of Orthodox Christians – much like
our spirituality and liturgical life in general – communicates the
fragrance and radiance of the Resurrection. The Cross is found at
the heart of Orthodox piety, but it is not the final point of
reference in the life of the Church. Instead, the essence of
Orthodox spiritual life is the ineffable joy of the Resurrection,
toward which the Cross constitutes the way. Accordingly, during the
period of Great Lent, the quintessence of experience for Orthodox
Christians is always the yearning for the “common resurrection.” Pray, then, precious brothers and
sisters in the Lord, that we may be deemed worthy, with the grace
and support from above, through the intercessions of the Theotokos,
as first among the saints, and of all the saints, that we may run
the race of Holy and Great Lent in a way that is fitting and joyous
before Christ, joyfully exercising, in obedience to the rule of
church tradition, the “common struggle” of fasting that extinguishes
the passions, constantly praying, helping the suffering and needful,
forgiving one another and “giving thanks for all things” (Thess.
5.18), in order that we might venerate with a devout heart the
“Holy, Saving and Awesome Passion” as well as the life-giving
Resurrection of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ, to whom
belong glory, power and thanksgiving to the endless ages. Amen.
Holy
and Great Lent 2019
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[1]
P.V. Paschos (ed.), New Miterikon (Athens: Akritas Publications,
1990), 31.
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Article published in English on: 15-8-2018.
Last update: 15-8-2018.