Solemnity of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross
St. Notburga, Virgin, (1313)
St. Mirin, Bishop, (7th century)
St. Eugenia, Virgin and Martyr, (unknown)
St. Eulogius, Bishop, (607)
St. Amatus, Abbot, (630)
St. Gertrude of Altenberg, Virgin, (1297)
St. Eanswida, Virgin, (640)
St. Guy of Anderlecht, Penitent, (1012)
Today marks the Feast of El-Nayrouz, the Coptic New Year 1724. More information is available from the St. Takla website.
In the feast of El-Nayrouz we behold the opened gates of Paradise. We see our Christ coming to carry us on the clouds, together with those who already entered the Paradise. All of us will enjoy the divine throne in heaven.
The following is a prayer for the feast.
O Lord, grant us to celebrate El-Nayrouz,
So that we may ask for a blessed year for all mankind.
And that every believer has the experience of Your marvelous Day.
Thus, all will enjoy the brightness of Your glory.Yes, Come quickly O Lord Jesus.
Our hearts are enflamed with Your love.
Our hearts ask for none except You.Let me, O God, celebrate the Feast of El-Nayrouz unceasingly.
Let me experience this joyful gospel, the gospel of everlasting unity with You.Wondrous is the Son who paid the price of my trip to Your divine bosoms,
And Your Holy Spirit who forms me to become a heavenly bride,
Carrying me as if with the wings of a dove that heaven may celebrate my wedding!I see You my beloved Christ, coming to me personally,
You have chosen me to share in Your glory,
You offered Yourself, a joyful sacrifice of love.Grant me to become an icon of You,
With a big heart, full of love to all humans,
That, I may become a source of joy to everyone.Your dwelling in me, O Holy Spirit renews my nature,
He transforms my dark tomb into a holy sanctuary,
He converts my darkness into exceeding brightness!Grant me with all my brethren, to fly and be with You in heaven!
Let me celebrate the feast of the martyrs as fit, that I may practice witnessing for You.
Change my life to be full of joy with You, even at the moments of my daily repentance.You see me my Lord rejoicing in You, and You become delighted in me.
The heavenly angels see me coming to You, and they welcome me.
They receive me with exceeding joy to join them in praising You.The sinners see me full of joy, and they get filled with hope.
They see me rejoicing, and they join me in my continuous repentance.The prophets and the apostles and all the martyrs see me.
And they praise You for letting me accompany them in Your kingdom!What a wonderful thing, You delight in me,
And so do all Your creation, in heaven and on earth!But the devil runs away in front of me
As he sees Your divine joy enlightens me and shines upon my face!Glory is to You, the source of joy and victory.
Grant me O Lord that I may celebrate the feast of the martyrs all my life,
That, I may witness to Your joyful gospel,
That, I may always be in touch with Your tremendous fatherly love,I see You anticipating with longing for me too.
Saints Protus and Hyacinth, Martyrs, (unknown)
St. Paphnutius, Bishop, (350)
St. Patiens, Bishop, (480)
St. Pulcheria, Virgin, (453)
Saints Menodora, Metrodora, and Nymphodora, Virgins and Martyrs, (304)
St. Nicholas of Tolentino, Priest, (1305)
No, I am Matt Mullenweg.
I took the Technosailor self importance test and the following was the result:
You are most like Matt Mullenweg!
You are most like Matt Mullenweg. Though you recognize your authority, you do not relish the idea of using your power too aggressively. Instead, you rely on peers a lot. You do participate in the social media world, but it is not something that occupies a lot of time. You most likey devote yourself to projects that you feel passionate about and tend to evangelize those things quite a bit.
For those who don’t know, Matt Mullenweg is the founding developer of WordPress. Cool…
Also, I loved To Tell the Truth. Watched it with the family every evening.
An interesting aside, Kitty Carlisle Hart, who featured prominently on To Tell the Truth was a great patron of the arts right here in Albany and served on the New York State Council of the Arts. The Kitty Carlisle Hart Theatre at the Egg is named after her (a very nice venue).
But wanting to justify himself, he asked Jesus, ‘And who is my neighbor?’
Taken from the Gospel according to St. Luke, Tenth Chapter, Verse 29.
Now Jesus will take an opportunity to teach the young lawyer. He will instruct him on the requirements surrounding acts of neighborliness. Jesus will tell him in no uncertain terms that we are all joined together as brothers and sisters. Jesus will ask the lawyer to go and believe the same thing.
We do not know if Jesus’ words made an impact on the young lawyer. Did he go out and change his ways? Did he take the focus off his desire for personal justification? Did he learn that justification comes from living a life in accord with God’s way?
In the same way, we do not know that much about each other. How much will today’s readings, the message of this homily, the sacraments, bring about change in our lives? How much will this Solemnity of Brotherly Love bring about a change in us? Will we still ask: Who is my brother?
We are certainly pious. We are here every week. We work hard for the Church and for each other.
But are we changing?
The Orthodox Jewish singer Matisyahu sings about change in his song —Chop ’em Down.— In the song he sings:
From the forest itself comes the handle for the ax
Consider that: the forest provides the wood for the very ax that will change the face of the forest. From within the forest comes the tool that will make the forest over.
Brothers and sisters,
By our baptism we are God’s children. Jesus Christ is within us. That’s the starting point. Now we must accomplish great changes, both within ourselves, and across the world.
From the very depths of our being we must find the tool, the thing that will bring about change in our lives and in the world. We must recognize Christ within ourselves —“ the demanding and exacting Jesus who teaches all righteousness. Then seeing Him, we must live His word and see Him in each and every person we meet.
The lawyer’s idea of justification is wonderful. We can have life with God forever —“ and that’s great. But if, like the lawyer, think that the road to the justification is paved with easy platitudes, or pre-set formulas for accomplishing change, we are sadly mistaken.
It is not an easy road. The road to heaven, the road to treating each and every human being as a brother and sister, is most difficult.
Difficult, not only in recognizing Christ in our brothers and sisters, but also difficult in witnessing to them —“ witnessing by actions that accept them in love, witnessing in accepting and loving them while holding up Christian witness to the proper path and way of living. Witnessing, not be preaching to them, but by loving their humanity and by acting as Christ would. To live according to God’s ways.
We all have the thing in our personal forests that can be fashioned into a tool to make ourselves and the word over. We have the capability to treat each person as a brother or sister, for God is in us. That is a gift from God. It is not self made, nor is it put there to be admired from afar. It is there to be used, and used in doing right, worshiping right, and witnessing correctly.
God states, through the prophet Jeremiah:
I will place My law within them, and write it upon their hearts.
He fulfilled that promise in His Son, Jesus. He wrote His law in the flesh of our hearts. He writes it in each and every heart, and we are to recognize Him.
That is why each person is a brother or sister. That is why each is the image of God.
We are the instruments of change. We are the good Samaritans, we are the wood of that ax handle —“ the one that will change everything. We must take action to cooperate in making all things new.
We may never know the extent of the change in that lawyer, or in the person sitting next to you. That is really unimportant. The only thing we can know is the extent to which God has brought about repentance, change, charity, and compassion in our lives. How my eyes and your eyes have changed.
St. John concludes by telling us that:
Love has been perfected among us in this: that we may have boldness on the day of judgment, because as He is, so are we in this world.
If we bear Christ, if we are one with Him in our journey of change, if we bear His love, the gospel message, and our witness in treating all with brotherly love, then we will be confident before God’s throne.
Let us begin today.
The Solemnity of Brotherly Love
St. Gorgonius, Martyr, (unknown)
St. Issac the Armenian, Bishop, (439)
St. Ciaran, Abbot, (556)
Solemnity of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
Saints Adrian and Natalia, Martyrs, (304)
Saints Eusebius, Nestabus, Zeno, and Nestor, Martyrs, (362)
Imitate her, holy mothers, who in her only dearly beloved Son set forth so great an example of maternal virtue; for neither have you sweeter children, nor did the Virgin seek the consolation of being able to bear another son. –St. Ambrose, To the Christian at Vercellae, Letter 63:111