Sunday, December 10, 2006

Homily by His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew during the Divine Liturgy on the Feast Day of St. Andrew at the Patriarchal Cathedral of St. George

With the grace of God, Your Holiness, we have been blessed to enter the joy of the Kingdom, to "see the true light and receive the heavenly Spirit." Every celebration of the Divine Liturgy is a powerful and inspiring con-celebration of heaven and of history. Every Divine Liturgy is both an anamnesis of the past and an anticipation of the Kingdom. We are convinced that during this Divine Liturgy, we have once again been transferred spiritually in three directions: toward the kingdom of heaven where the angels celebrate; toward the celebration of the liturgy through the centuries; and toward the heavenly kingdom to come.

This overwhelming continuity with heaven as well as with history means that the Orthodox liturgy is the mystical experience and profound conviction that "Christ was, is, and ever shall be in our midst!" For in Christ, there is a deep connection between past, present, and future. In this way, the liturgy is more than merely the recollection of Christ's words and acts. It is the realization of the very presence of Christ Himself, who has promised to be wherever two or three are gathered in His name.

At the same time, we recognize that the rule of prayer is the rule of faith (lex orandi lex credendi), that the doctrines of the Person of Christ and of the Holy Trinity have left an indelible mark on the liturgy, which comprises one of the undefined doctrines, "revealed to us in mystery," of which St. Basil the Great so eloquently spoke. This is why, in liturgy, we are reminded of the need to reach unity in faith as well as in prayer. Therefore, we kneel in humility and repentance before the living God and our Lord Jesus Christ, whose precious Name we bear and yet at the same time whose seamless garment we have divided. We confess in sorrow that we are not yet able to celebrate the holy sacraments in unity. And we pray that the day may come when this sacramental unity will be realized in its fullness.

And yet, Your Holiness and beloved brother in Christ, this con-celebration of heaven and earth, of history and time, brings us closer to each other today through the blessing of the presence, together with all the saints, of the predecessors of our Modesty, namely St. Gregory the Theologian and St. John Chrysostom. We are honored to venerate the relics of these two spiritual giants after the solemn restoration of their sacred relics in this holy church two years ago when they were graciously returned to us by the venerable Pope John Paul II. Just as, at that time, during our Thronal Feast, we welcomed and placed their saintly relics on the Patriarchal Throne, chanting "Behold your throne!" So, today we gather in their living presence and eternal memory as we celebrate the Liturgy named in honor of St. John Chrysostom.
Thus our worship coincides with the same joyous worship in heaven and throughout history. Indeed, as St. John Chrysostom himself affirms: "Those in heaven and those on earth form a single festival, a shared thanksgiving, one choir" (PG 56.97). Heaven and earth offer one prayer, one feast, and one doxology. The Divine Liturgy is at once the heavenly kingdom and our home, "a new heaven and a new earth" (Rev. 21.1), the ground and center where all things find their true meaning. The Liturgy teaches us to broaden our horizon and vision, to speak the language of love and communion, but also to learn that we must be with one another in spite of our differences and even divisions. In its spacious embrace, it includes the whole world, the communion of saints, and all of God's creation. The entire universe becomes "a cosmic liturgy", to recall the teaching of St. Maximus the Confessor. This kind of Liturgy can never grow old or outdated.

The only appropriate response to this showering of divine benefits and compassionate mercy is gratitude (eucharistia). Indeed, thanksgiving and glory are the only fitting response of human beings to their Creator. For to Him belong all glory, honor, and worship: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit; now and always, and to the ages of ages. Amen.

Truly, particular and wholehearted gratitude fills our hearts toward the loving God, for today, on the festive commemoration of the Apostle founder and protector of this Church, the Divine Liturgy is attended by His Holiness our brother and bishop of the elder Rome, Pope Benedict XVI, together with his honorable entourage. Once again, we gratefully greet this presence as a blessing from God, as an expression of brotherly love and honor toward our Church, and as evidence of our common desire to continue – in a spirit of love and faithfulness to the Gospel Truth and the common tradition of our Fathers – the unwavering journey toward the restoration of full communion among our Churches, which constitutes His divine will and command. May it be so.

Thursday, October 05, 2006

"The brethren asked Abba Agathon: 'Among all our different activities, father, which is the virtue that requires the greatest effort?' He answered: 'Forgive me, but I think there is no labour greater than praying to God. For every time a man wants to pray, his enemies the demons try to prevent him; for they know that nothing obstructs them so much as prayer to God. In everything else that a man undertakes, if he perserveres, he will attain rest. But in order to pray a man must struggle to his last breath.' "

-The Sayings of the Desert Fathers



3 stages along the spiritual Way (interdependent, coexisting, not successive, but simultaneous)

1. Active life (or practice of the virtues)
2. Contemplation of nature
3. Contemplation of God


1. Prayer as action...(active life)

...Each day we are to renew our relationship with god through living prayer; and to pray, as Abba Agathon reminds us, is the hardest of all tasks. Also each day we are to renew our relationship with others through imaginative sympathy, through acts of practical compassion, and through cutting off our own self-will. Take up the Cross of Christ...everyday afresh. (Luke 9:23). And yet this daily cross-bearing is at the same time a daily sharing in the Lord's Transfiguration and Resurrection: 'sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; poor, yet making many rich; having nothing, yet possessing all things...dying, and, behold, we live' (2 Corinthians 6:9).

The active life is marked by four qualities: repentance, watchfulness, discrimination, and the guarding of the heart.

Repentance, marks the beginning, it is a change of mind.
Watchfulness, is sobriety, living in the present moment. (The present is the point at which time touches eternity)
Discrimination is discernment.
Guarding the heart is warfare against the passions. Transfigure our evil passions into virtues.

These virtues are to be practiced with body and soul, leading us to dispassion.

"When a man with such a heart as this thinks of the creatures and looks at them, his eyes are filled with tears because of the overwhelming compassion that presses upon his heart. The heart of such a man grows tender, and he cannot endure to hear of or look upon any injury, even the smallest suffering, inflicted upon anything in creation. Therefore he never ceases to pray with tears even for the dumb animals, for the enemies of truth and for all who do harm to it, asking that they may be guarded and receive God's mercy. And for the reptiles also he prays with great compassion, which rises up endlessly in his heart, after the example of God."

-St. Isaac the Syrian


2. Contemplation of nature

Understanding nature in God, or God in and through nature. (Watchfulness is key)

Like Moses discovering himself to be on Holy Ground, this contemplation helps us discover through our spiritual intellect that the whole universe is a cosmic Burning Bush, filled with the divine Fire yet not consumed.

The Elixir by George Herbert

Teach me, my God and King,
In all things thee to see,
And what I do in any thing,
To do it as for thee.

A man that looks on glasse,
On it may stay his eye;
Or if he pleaseth, though it passe,
And then the heav'n espie.

Find God in all things and in all persons.

The Lord of Nature
The Lord of Scripture


Active life is necessary, thus the interdependence of the stages.


3. Contemplation of God

From Words to Silence.

Through an active life of prayer and contemplation of nature, man realizes that God is above and beyond nature. We can begin in this life to know God not solely through the medium of creation, but in direct and unmediated union. Prayer in this sense is a laying aside of thoughts, as Evagrius puts it. For God lies beyond all human words and thoughts, and what we think about God is never the entire Truth. This prayer of stillness is known as Hesychia. One who practices this form of prayer is known as a Hesychast. The goal is to acheive a constant state of prayer even in the midst of other activities.

Lord Jesus Christ, son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.



This concept of Contemplation of God is deeper than time permits to discuss at this time on this blog. The ideas in this post are taken mostly from Bishop Kallistos Ware's work The Orthodox Way which has influenced my thinking very deeply in the past year. I hope to be able to share more about Hesychia in the future on this blog and would be interested in hearing anyone's thoughts on it. This site is dedicated to prayer, and as one can see already by this posting, the definition of prayer is much bigger than most of us once thought.

Peace to all.

Thursday, September 21, 2006

"Prayer is a state of continual gratitude. "

-St. John of Krondstadt



"If I do not feel a sense of joy in God's creation, if I forget to offer the world back to God with thankfulness, I have advanced very little upon the Way. I have not yet learnt to be truly human. For it is only through thanksgiving that I can become myself. "

-Bishop Kallistos Ware (The Orthodox Way)



Man is not so much logical as he is eucharistic. He sees the world as God's gift, as a sacrament of God's presence and a means of communion with Him. He offers the world back to God in thanksgiving.



"Thine own from thine own we offer to thee, in all and for all"

-from The Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom

Tuesday, August 08, 2006

PRAY