Month: October 2008

Christian Witness, PNCC, ,

Orthodox Patriarch addresses Synod of Catholic bishops

From Ekklesia: Orthodox Patriarch addresses Synod of Catholic bishops for the first time.

“It is well known that the Orthodox Church attaches to the synod system fundamental ecclesiological importance. Together with primacy, synodality constitutes the backbone of the Church’s government and organization. … Therefore, in having today the privilege to address your Synod our hopes are raised that the day will come when our two Churches will fully converge on the role of primacy and synodality in the Church’s life, to which our joint theological commission is devoting its study at the present time”.

A prayer that echos in the PNCC as well.

Dialog is great, but only bears fruit in self examination. Unfortunately the door to self examination appears to be closing – a negative affect of Benedict’s reform. Certain of the Roman Church’s bishops are using Church discipline, focused on correcting liturgical abuses, as an excuse for door slamming. Those very same bishops continue to perpetuate every sort of post Vatican II abuse while at the same time invoking Roman elitism in furtherance of personal agendas; an excuse for closing their ears. Frankly, I agree with Benedict’s reforms. Correct the abuses and excesses of the post Vatican II Church, but don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater. It is not playing that way in the U.S., and appears, at least to me, as an opportunity for self-serving under the cloak of the reform-of-the-reform.

On the Synod itself, I pray that the Roman Church’s Synod on the Word elevates the role of the hearing and preaching on the Word of God. This is one of the sacraments of the PNCC. The PNCC’s understanding of the sacramentality of the Word is core to the Church’s efforts in proclaiming Christ. As a PNCC clergyman you cannot take the role of preacher lightly, or use your time in the pulpit as an opportunity to focus on anything other than the Word. You must seek the inspiration of the Spirit, a gift of your ordination, and use those gifts to God’s purpose.

Christian Witness, ,

Congratulations to St. Peter’s

Fr. Bedros Kadehjian informs me that St. Peter’s Armenian Apostolic Church will be celebrating its 109th anniversary on Sunday, November 2. The celebration begins with the Divine Liturgy celebrated by the Very Rev. Fr. Haigazoun Najarian, Diocesan Vicar to the Primate. Fr. Najarian will also perform the ribbon-cutting ceremony on the parish’s recently completed building expansion project.

The Liturgy and ribbon cutting will be followed by a celebratory dinner (lamb and chicken kebabs, pilaf, Armenian style green beans, salad, Armenian desserts) and a special program including guest speakers Congressman Michael McNulty and Mayor Mike Manning from the City of Watervliet. There will be also be presentations by the St. Peter Church Armenian School and Sunday School children.

I wish all the best to St. Peter’s, its people, and Fathers Bedros, Stepanos, and Garin. Õ‡Õ¶Õ¸Ö€Õ°Õ¡Õ¾Õ¸Ö€Õ¸Ö‚Õ´

They are wonderful people and have supported our entire community through their prayer and outreach. They have welcomed our ecumenical group numerous times and have always stayed true to their traditions and Tradition.

Please say a prayer for their community and wish them well.

The inanimate church, venerable queen,
Gives life and rules over death,
Like the fruit that Adam was said to have eaten.
But this church surpasses all animate beings,
For though inanimate, it performs miracles,
Each undertaking to perfect and renew us,
By etching the image of the glorious light upon us.

She uplifts bodies to soar again with
The lightness of the soul, endowing
The baser element with dignity.
She is not debased by her own faults,
But by being trampled by evil or faithless people.
She is an amazing sign, overwhelming our mind’s understanding,
This unthinking thing, created by thinking creatures,
That helps them as a superior helps its subordinate.
She is greater than man …
Like an eternal mountain she resists attack.
Like a net cast by God she catches souls.

For she is an ark of purity,
A second cause of rejoicing
Who saves us from drowning
In the tumult of our worldly lives.
She is not tossed about on waves of agitation,
But rises above it to the heavenly heights …
She is not built by the hands of Noah,
But is built by the hand of the creator.
She is not in perpetual motion, constantly changing
But is established permanently upon an unshakable foundation.

St. Gregory of Nareg, Prayer 75
Speaking With God From the Depths of My Heart, from: Here I am, Lord, A collection of prayers and meditations for young adults drawn from Scripture, Armenian tradition, and original compositions.

Fathers, PNCC

October 22 – St. Augustine from the Enchiridion: On Faith, Hope, and Love

And now regarding love, which the apostle says is greater than the other two — that is, faith and hope — for the more richly it dwells in a man, the better the man in whom it dwells. For when we ask whether someone is a good man, we are not asking what he believes, or hopes, but what he loves. Now, beyond all doubt, he who loves aright believes and hopes rightly. Likewise, he who does not love believes in vain, even if what he believes is true; he hopes in vain, even if what he hopes for is generally agreed to pertain to true happiness, unless he believes and hopes for this: that he may through prayer obtain the gift of love. For, although it is true that he cannot hope without love, it may be that there is something without which, if he does not love it, he cannot realize the object of his hopes. An example of this would be if a man hopes for life eternal — and who is there who does not love that? — and yet does not love righteousness, without which no one comes to it. — Chapter XXXI.

Fathers, PNCC

October 21 – St. Ephraim the Syrian from the Discourses to Hypatius against False Teachers

Ephraim to Hypatius my brother in our Lord —” greeting: may peace with every man increase for us and may the peace which is between us abound, in the peace of truth may we be established, and let us make especial use of the greeting (conveyed) in a letter.

Behold, I am writing willingly something that I did not wish to write. For I did not wish that a letter should pass between us, since it cannot ask or be asked questions; but I had wished that there might pass between us a discourse from mouth to ear, asking and being asked questions. The written document is the image of the composite body, just as also the free tongue is the likeness of the free mind. For the body cannot add or subtract anything from the measure of its stature, nor can a document add to or subtract from the measure of its writing. But a word-of-mouth discourse can be within the measure or without the measure. — Greeting and introduction from the First Discourse.

Perspective, Poland - Polish - Polonia, , ,

The best vodka in town

I love Vodka, and especially Polish vodka, more properly Polskie wódki. While Polish Vodka gets its shelf space in U.S. liquor stores, most shoppers still miss out on the vast variety of types and styles available. This article from the Sydney Morning Herald explores the history and variety found in the world of Polish vodka: The best vodka in town.

Here are some of the types and styles I have tried:

  • Belvedere
  • Chopin
  • Luksusowa
  • Wyborowa
  • Żubrówka (3 ways – the original, homemade using bison grass from Białowieża, and the U.S. import)
  • Extra Żytnia
  • Lanique Vodka (kosher from فańcut Distillery)
  • Królewska

I encourage you to drop a note to your local proprietor and ask that they carry a selection of Polish vodkas. Of course enjoy responsibly.

Fathers, PNCC

October 20 – Eusebius of Caesarea from The History of the Martyrs in Palestine

So, then, we have described and made known the things which were done during the whole time of the persecution among the people in Palestine. And all these were blessed martyrs of God, who triumphed in our time; who made light of this temporary life, and prized the worship of God far above every other thing, and have received the hidden hope of those good things which are invisible to the bodily eyes.

Oh! the blessed confessors of the kingdom of Christ, who were tried like gold in the excellence of their righteousness, and obtained through the conflict in which they were set the heavenly life of angels, and laid hold upon the promises of the hidden good things of the victory of the high calling–For eye hath not seen nor ear heard, neither hath it entered into the heart of man, what God has prepared for them that love him.

Homilies,

Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time

First reading: Isaiah 45:1,4-6
Psalm: Ps 96:1,3-5,7-10
Epistle: 1 Thessalonians 1:1-5
Gospel: Matthew 22:15-21

It is I who arm you, though you know me not,
so that toward the rising and the setting of the sun
people may know that there is none besides me.

These words, taken from the forty-fifth chapter of Isaiah were addressed to Cyrus the Great.

A little bit about Cyrus. He was the first Achaemenid Emperor, having founded Persia by uniting the two original Iranian Tribes —“ the Medes and the Persians. Although he was known to be a great conqueror, who controlled one of the greatest Empires ever seen, he is best remembered for his unprecedented tolerance and magnanimous attitude towards those he defeated.

After conquering Babylon, Cyrus freed the Jewish people from captivity. God had a purpose for Cyrus. Cyrus didn’t know God at all, yet God took him by the hand and made him victorious, all so God’s plan would be achieved.

So it is with us. We are all at different stages in knowing God. Some come here and do not know Him, yet here they are, as part of God’s plan. Some come somewhere along the continuum in their knowledge of God. They come seeking fuller, more intimate knowledge of Him. The point really is that people come here —“ for a reason —“ for a purpose, and as part of God’s plan.

Brothers and sisters,

I want to offer you an image from your parish life. I want you to reflect on your flooded parking lot. Think of your parish parking lot, when it gets filled with water, typically in the spring, but really after any prolonged rain. Bingo canceled, no place to park, so much water that it’s difficult to get to the door. Your flood has graced the pages of the Times-Union. That flood is symbolic.

That flood represents the way people must go, the way they must travel to come to Christ. The vast majority of people coming here, to this parish, come broken and lost. They have to slog their way through that flood, the dirty water, the smell, and the wet cold feet. Very few come in, having already reached a state of perfection. Most people who come here come with bad histories, broken relationships, trauma, sadness, pain, loss, fear, sins by the hundredfold. They come with sexual sins, greed, addictions, anger, prejudice, and laziness. They come, having made the decision to walk through that messy flooded parking lot, with a load of pain on their shoulders, seeking the comfort of God. They seek the comfort only God can give. That comfort comes when He lifts the sins from their shoulders; that comfort comes when, over time, He heals them of their brokenness.

Recall the words of Psalm 127, verse 1:

Unless the Lord builds the house,
those who build it labor in vain.

This parish is not here because you have built it. It is not here because you hold bingo and PolishFest, or because folks drop money in the basket, or because you work, and work, and work. It is not here because of donations or bequests.

If you believe in your heart-of-hearts that this parish is the work of your hands you have made a mistake. If you believe that the flooded parking lot is simply an opportunity for hard working folks to stop by and walk-on-water, you are mistaken.

This parish is here because God has chosen you and because He has chosen this place. This parish is here to accept and to welcome the broken. It is here because God wants you to throw open the doors and welcome all those who come seeking Him. God wants this place, right here in Latham, New York, for the hurting and the sinful, the people with the wet stinky feet.

You are here to give onto God what belongs to God.

My friends,

Those who come seeking, who come to this place, will change ever so slightly over time. The sins that were a hundredfold will lessen. Some sins will persist, they will be harder to let go of. Some of their pain, sadness, and fear will last for years; the healing will be slow. Nothing will happen overnight, and you cannot erase history. People will need to have their feet washed over and over and over and over again.

As Christians it is our job to wash feet, to bandage them when needed, and to persist in our love —“ even when it is difficult. We are to do that for each other and for all who come. We cannot heal today and expect perfection tomorrow. It is a good bet that we will need to heal tomorrow and for months, years, and decades after that. Our success can only be measured after we leave behind our earthly bodies. When we reach paradise and Jesus embraces us, then the healing will be complete.

Until then, recall the words that St. Paul wrote to the Church at Thessalonica:

We give thanks to God always for all of you,
remembering you in our prayers,
unceasingly calling to mind your work of faith and labor of love
and endurance in hope of our Lord Jesus Christ

The work of faith and the labor of love is before you. The wet, stinky feet await you. Embrace them and kiss them, wash them and bandage them, do it seventy times seven. God has chosen you and has chosen this place for that work.

As it was with Cyrus so it is with you. All of salvation history is about God’s selection of people and places. He has chosen you and this place for His work. He has taken you by the hand.

My prayers are with you and for you as you carry out the work of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. I encourage you in love to endure in expectation of the healing that is everlasting. Amen.

Fathers, PNCC

October 19 – St. John Chrysostom from Homilies on Matthew

Tell us therefore, what thinkest Thou?” Now ye honor Him, and esteem Him a Teacher, having despised and insulted Him oftentimes, when He was discoursing of the things that concern your salvation. Whence also they are become confederates.

And see their craftiness. They say not, Tell us what is good, what is expedient, what is lawful? but, “What thinkest Thou?” So much did they look to this one object, to betray Him, and to set Him at enmity with the rulers. And Mark declaring this, and more plainly discovering their self-will, and their murderous disposition, affirms them to have said, “Shall we give Cæsar tribute, or shall we not give?” So that they were breathing anger, and travailing with a plot against Him, yet they feigned respect.

What then says He? “Why do you tempt me, you hypocrites?” Do you see how He talks with them with more than usual severity? For since their wickedness was now complete and manifest, He cuts the deeper, first confounding and silencing them, by publishing their secret thoughts, and making it manifest to all with what kind of intent they are coming unto Him.

And these things He did, repulsing their wickedness, so that they might not suffer hurt in attempting the same things again. And yet their words were full of much respect, for they both called Him Master, and bore witness to His truth, and that He was no respecter of persons; but being God, He was deceived by none of these things. Wherefore they also ought to have conjectured, that the rebuke was not the result of conjecture, but a sign of His knowing their secret thoughts.

He stopped not, however, at the rebuke, although it was enough merely to have convicted them of their purpose, and to have put them to shame for their wickedness; but He stops not at this, but in another way closes their mouths; for, “Show me,” says He, “the tribute money.” And when they had shown it, as He ever does, by their tongue He brings out the decision, and causes them to decide, that it is lawful; which was a clear and plain victory. So that, when He asks, not from ignorance does He ask, but because it is His will to cause them to be bound by their own answers. For when, on being asked, “Whose is the image?” they said, “Cæsar’s;” He says, “Render unto Cæsar the things that are Cæsar’s.” For this is not to give but to render, and this He shows both by the image, and by the superscription.

Then that they might not say, You are subjecting us to men, He added, “And unto God the things that are God’s.” For it is possible both to fulfill to men their claims and to give unto God the things that are due to God from us. Wherefore Paul also says, “Render unto all their dues; tribute to whom tribute is due, custom to whom custom, fear to whom fear.

But you, when you hear, “Render unto Cæsar the things which are Cæsar’s,” know that He is speaking only of those things, which are no detriment to godliness; since if it be any such thing as this, such a thing is no longer Cæsar’s tribute, but the devil’s.

When they heard these things, their mouths were stopped, and they “marvelled” at His wisdom. Ought they not then to have believed, ought they not to have been amazed. For indeed, He gave them proof of His Godhead, by revealing the secrets of their hearts, and with gentleness did He silence them. — Homily on Matthew 22:15-21.

Fathers, PNCC

October 18 – Eusebius of Caesarea from The History of the Martyrs in Palestine

This blessed Silvanus came from Gaza, and he was one of the veteran soldiers; and when his freedom from service proved to be contrary to his habits, he enlisted himself as a good soldier of Christ. For he was a perfectly meek man, and of bright turn of mind, and used his faith with simplicity and purity. And he was a presbyter of the church in the city of Gaza, and conducted himself there with great propriety. And because the conflict for life was proclaimed against the soldiers of Christ, he, an old man, of a noble person, went down to the Stadium, and there, in his first confession before the people of Caesarea, he acquitted himself valiantly, being tried with scourgings. And when he had endured these bravely, he fought in a second conflict, in which the old man endured the combs on his sides like a young man. And at the third conflict he was sent to the copper mines; and during a life of much length he exhibited great probation. He was also deemed worthy of the office of the episcopate, and also rendered himself illustrious in this office of his ministry. But on the fourth day of Iyar the great gate of heaven was fully opened to him, and this blessed man went up with a company of martyrs, not being left alone, for a great assembly of brave men followed him. And suddenly a mandate of wickedness was issued, and command was given that all those in the mines who were become enfeebled through old age or sickness, and those who were not able to work, should be put to death by the sword; and God’s martyrs, being all together forty in number, were beheaded all in one day. And many of them were Egyptians, but their leader and guide was this same martyr and bishop of martyrs, Silvanus, a man truly blessed and beloved of God. — The Confession of Silvanus, and of those with him.

Fathers, PNCC

October 17 – Eusebius of Caesarea from The History of the Martyrs in Palestine

In the month Canun the former, on the fourteenth of the same — on this day some Egyptian martyrs of God were seized before the gates of Ashkelon; and because, when they were questioned as to who they were, they acknowledged that they were Christians, and confessed that they had undertaken the journey, and were come from their own country for the purpose of taking sustenance to the confessors who were in Cilicia, they also were brought as malefactors before the judge. For the keepers of the gates of the city were cruel men, and laid hold upon these martyrs, and took them before Firmillianus the governor, because he was also, up to that time, still over the people of Palestine; and he decreed a cruel sentence against them: and some of them he ordered to have their eyes and their feet injured by fire and steel, and some of them to be delivered over to death by the sword; but one of them, whose name was Ares, was consummated in his confession by a fierce fire, and Primus and Elias were beheaded by the sword. — The Confession of Ares, and Primus, and Elias.