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Homily - Orthodox Familial Ecclesiology

OrthoAnalytika

Release Date: 10/13/2024

Homily - Parable of the Prodigal Son show art Homily - Parable of the Prodigal Son

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(Luke 15: 11-32). Riffing off of St Nikolai Velimirovic, Fr Anthony preaches on the attributes of love - patience, forgiveness, and joy - that the father exhibits towards his sons as he pastors and encourages them them towards perfection.

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Revelation - Session 14 show art Revelation - Session 14

OrthoAnalytika

Revelation Class 14 – 19; Heading to the Final Showdown 12 February 2025 Revelation, Chapter Fifteen - Twenty    Patrick Henry Reardon, Revelation: A Liturgical Prophecy (Yonkers, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2018), 79–. Chapter Fifteen John sees in heaven the tabernacle of testimony from the Book of Exodus, the traveling tent of the divine presence that Moses and the Israelites carried through the desert. This tent, however, is “heavenly,” which means that it is the original model, the very pattern that Moses copied (Ex 25:9, 40; Acts 7:44; Heb 8:5). … The tent...

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Homily - Simplicity show art Homily - Simplicity

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Luke 18:10-14. In this homily on the Publican and Pharisee, Fr. Anthony loses his voice and misses a couple of his points but still manages to spend over twenty minutes preaching about the need for repentance and good habits on the way to holiness. Enjoy the show!

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Revelation - Session 13 show art Revelation - Session 13

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Revelation Class 13 – The Woman and the Beasts 05 February 2025 Revelation, Chapter Twelve - Fourteen    Patrick Henry Reardon, Revelation: A Liturgical Prophecy (Yonkers, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2018), 70–78. Chapter Twelve … Nonetheless, this is not simply a description of the Lord’s nativity. The Woman in the vision is the mother of Jesus, but she is more; she is also the Church, which gives birth to Christ in the world. The sufferings and persecution of the Church are described as birth pangs (cf. Jn 16:21–22). The serpent, of course, is the ancient dragon...

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Homily - Love Means Showing Up show art Homily - Love Means Showing Up

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Luke 2:22-40. Today the Meeting of the Lord was on a Sunday so everyone got some candles! They also heard Fr. Anthony preach on the stories and virtues of some of the participants in this great feast. Enjoy the show!

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Homily - Zacchaeus & Repentance show art Homily - Zacchaeus & Repentance

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Luke 19:1-10 Today Fr. Anthony praises St. Zacchaeus’ true repentance, compares it to an ephemeral sort of repentance, and notes the great freedom that simplicity brings.   Enjoy the show & please forgive the audio quality!

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Bible Study - Revelation Session 12 show art Bible Study - Revelation Session 12

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Revelation Class 12 – The Trumpets 22 January 2025 Revelation, Chapter Eight - Eleven    Patrick Henry Reardon, Revelation: A Liturgical Prophecy (Yonkers, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2018), 58–69. In the present text, the immediate response to the opening of the seventh seal is silence in heaven for thirty minutes (verse 1), while the angels with the seven trumpets prepare themselves (verses 2, 6), and the throne room is ritually incensed (verse 3). The silence that accompanies the incensing provides a time for prayers to be offered, the ascending of which is symbolized...

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Homily - Gratitude and Community show art Homily - Gratitude and Community

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On Gratitude (with thanks to St. Nicholai Velimirovich) Luke 17: 12-19 (The Ten Lepers, only one of whom returned) [Start with a meditation on the virtues of hard work and gratitude; hard work so that we can be proud of what we have done and foster an appreciation for the amount of effort that goes into the making and sustaining of things. This makes us grateful for what we have, and especially the amount of effort that goes into gifts that we receive from others. But what if these virtues break down? What if there was a society where hard work was not required and gratitude was neither...

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Homily - Holiness Changes Everything show art Homily - Holiness Changes Everything

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Homily: Holiness Changes Everything (Sunday after Theophany) Ephesians 4: 7-13 St. Matthew 4: 12-17  Review/Introduction.  Ontology of Beauty.  Designed to provide a deeper appreciation for our faith and to demonstrate the blindness of materialism (to include the “new atheists”).  When materialists describe our appreciation for beauty, they either try to show how an appreciation for beauty somehow increased evolutionary fitness, or, in a more sophisticated way, say that it is a happy coincidence.  We know that there is more to beauty than these explanations...

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Homily - Beauty & Repentance show art Homily - Beauty & Repentance

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The Sunday before Theophany On Repentance and Its Relationship to Beauty and Love 2 Timothy 4: 5-8;  St. Mark 1: 1-8 “Behold, I will send my messenger before your face, who will prepare your way, the voice of one crying in the wilderness: ‘Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make his paths straight;” After me comes he who is mightier than I, the strap of whose sandals I am not worthy to stoop down and untie.  I have baptized you with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.” Sandals – he knew humility (despite the many temptations he faced for pride!).  The...

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St. Luke 8:5-15. In today's homily, Fr. Anthony speaks about how a marriage should function in an Orthodox context and how that translates to our life in the Church. Enjoy the show!

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Here's the homily I planned on giving before I called an audible.  

Homily Notes: Tending the Garden of our Souls
St. Luke 
8:5-15: The Gospel of the Sower

Have you rejected Satan and all his works and all his pomp and all his pride?
Have you rejected Satan and all his works and all his pomp and all his pride? 
Have you rejected Satan and all his works and all his pomp and all his pride?”

“Have you accepted Christ? 
Have you accepted Christ? 
Have you accepted Christ?”

Our affirmation of these questions before our baptism, the sacramental participation that followed, and the fact that we are here today means that we are Christians.  We have rejected the way of the world – which is ruled by Satan – and have become part of the New Humanity that is preparing to inherit the New World; a world that is uncorrupted by Satan and the sins of the Old Humanity. 

To move away from eschatological and theological terms into the beautiful metaphors Christ gave us in today’s parable:  the seed of perfection (Christ Himself!) has been planted in our souls. 

A seed is a miraculous thing; it contains all the information needed for the growing of a perfect plant.  The DNA is all there.  A wheat seed has everything needed to grow up to be a perfect stalk of wheat.  More amazingly, a small acorn can grow into an enormous tree.  The seed of Christ that has been planted in our souls is jut like that: we have been given everything we need – all the information – to grow into perfect men and women, into saints, into little Christ’s… to grow into the kind of peaceful, loving, and productive humans we were conceived and born to become.  The perfect seed is within our souls. 

But is that enough?  We have all planted many seeds in our lifetime.  Good seeds.  Good soil.  And yet we know that if we are not careful, we will still end up with a terrible harvest of weeds and brambles. 

Why?  How does this happen?

We live in a world that is full of loose spores.  The winds are full of the world’s little seeds.  They, too, carry all the potential of full growth within themselves.  At some point, some of these spores are bound to find their way into our gardens … and into the soil of our souls. 

The corruption of our gardens may begin through inattention – a lack of what we call “nepsis” – but that doesn’t explain why we end up with a bumper crop of thistles and thorns, leaving the seed we originally planted weak or even completely dead.  How did it happen?  It certainly wasn’t the seed.  And it wasn’t just that we weren’t paying attention – we always notice when something has changed in our gardens and in our lives.

It happened because we didn’t bother with the difficult work of weeding.

Weeding is such a judgmental term – it assumes a discernment that we have all but forgotten.  It requires, for instance, the realization, that Church on Sunday is more important than sports or sleeping in; that Feast Days are even more worthy ways to spend vacation days than trips to the beach; that spending a few minutes in prayer is worth the sacrifice of a few minutes of facebook or television; and that chastity is better in every respect than the transitory joy of serial monogamy, pornography, and adultery. 

New gardeners can’t tell a beautiful weed from beanstalk; they need to learn.  We also need to learn.  We need to realize

1.    That there are such things as weeds;

2.    That they are dangerous threats to our souls, our families, and our communities; and

3.    That it is our responsibility as human beings (God’s imagers on this earth; the New Humans!) to pull them out.

Terrible and noxious things have made their way into our souls.  We don’t like to call them weeds because some of them are pretty and it sounds so judgmental.  But as Christ says, you know a plant by its fruit;vand the plants of this world may look nice for a while, but their fruit is death and damnation (see Luke 6:44).

The Tree of the Cross is the plant that rises from the well-tended garden of the Christian soul, and its fruit is eternal life.