loader from loading.io

Homily - The Freedom that Bears Fruit

OrthoAnalytika

Release Date: 07/06/2026

Homily - The Freedom that Bears Fruit show art Homily - The Freedom that Bears Fruit

OrthoAnalytika

Galatians 5:22-26; 6:1-2 Freedom is more than independence from tyranny—it is the freedom to become what we were created to be. Reflecting on St. Paul's teaching about the fruit of the Spirit, this homily explores how the Christian life is a lifelong journey of growth, repentance, and transformation. Christ has already won the decisive victory; our task is simply to remain united to Him and let His life bear fruit within us.  Enjoy the show! --- Notes: This weekend our nation celebrates the Declaration of Independence. Whatever else one thinks about our country's history—and there is...

info_outline
Orthodox Evening Prayers show art Orthodox Evening Prayers

OrthoAnalytika

The Orthodox Evening Prayers from the Prayer Book of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA.

info_outline
Orthodox Morning Prayers show art Orthodox Morning Prayers

OrthoAnalytika

The Orthodox Morning Prayers from the Prayer Book of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA.

info_outline
Homily - From American Consumers to Orthodox Disciples show art Homily - From American Consumers to Orthodox Disciples

OrthoAnalytika

All Saints of North America and Antioch St. Matthew 4:18-23 On the Sunday of All Saints of North America and Antioch, Fr. Anthony reflects on how the same American instincts that often lead people to Orthodoxy can become obstacles to spiritual growth once they arrive. While habits of inquiry, comparison, and evaluation help many converts discover the Church, the Christian life requires a transition from constantly judging and analyzing to trusting the Church's proven path of formation. Drawing on examples from marriage, culture, and the lives of the saints, he argues that the Church has been...

info_outline
Homily - All Saints show art Homily - All Saints

OrthoAnalytika

The Sunday of All Saints reveals the fruit of Pentecost: the Holy Spirit does not produce one type of saint but sanctifies every kind of person according to God's purpose. The saints differ in vocation, personality, and circumstance, yet all are united by the same Spirit who transformed ordinary human lives into icons of Christ. The question is not whether we are the "right kind" of person to become holy, but whether we will allow the Holy Spirit to sanctify the life God has given us. --- Last Sunday we celebrated Pentecost. We celebrated the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles. And...

info_outline
Homily: The God Who Gives US What We Need (Pentecost) show art Homily: The God Who Gives US What We Need (Pentecost)

OrthoAnalytika

Acts of the Apostles 2:1-11; St. John 7:37-52; 8:12 Pentecost reveals the God who never ceases to act for our salvation, giving His people exactly what they need—from the Law at Sinai, to the Incarnation, Cross, and Resurrection, and finally the gift of the Holy Spirit. The kneeling prayers for the departed flow naturally from Christ's descent into Hades, for if Christ sought those held by death, His Incarnate Body, the Church, continues to seek them through prayer and love. We pray for the departed not because we possess a detailed map of the afterlife, but because Christians imitate...

info_outline
Homily - Sunday after Ascension show art Homily - Sunday after Ascension

OrthoAnalytika

In this homily on Christ’s prayer “that they may be one,” Father Anthony reflects on humanity’s calling to communion and the tragic ease with which sin turns even good things into instruments of division. Drawing on the example of Arius and the divisions of the modern world, he argues that the deepest fractures in society begin not in institutions but in the human heart. The healing of the world therefore begins not with self-righteous outrage or victory over enemies, but with repentance, humility, holiness, and the difficult work of learning to love one another in Christ.  Enjoy...

info_outline
Homily - Humility and Spiritual Sight show art Homily - Humility and Spiritual Sight

OrthoAnalytika

“I Once Was Blind”: Humility and Spiritual Sight St. John 9:1-38 In this homily on the healing of the man born blind, Father Anthony reflects on how Christ not only gives sight, but gradually heals the whole person. Though baptism opens our eyes to the truth of God and His Kingdom, we still struggle to see clearly through the distortions of pride, fear, anger, and self-justification. The path to true spiritual sight is therefore not certainty or condemnation, but humility, repentance, patience, and trust in the One who already reigns over the world. Enjoy the show! --- Today’s Gospel...

info_outline
Homily - From Justification to Repentance: The Samaritan Woman show art Homily - From Justification to Repentance: The Samaritan Woman

OrthoAnalytika

On the Sunday of the Samaritan Woman, this homily reflects on the encounter between Christ and Saint Photini, focusing on the deeper moral psychology of repentance. It explores how we instinctively justify our sins and construct explanations to protect ourselves, even in the presence of divine truth. Drawing on Scripture and the witness of the saints, it shows how true healing comes not through self-defense, but through humility, repentance, and stepping fully into the light of Christ.  Enjoy the show! --- From Justification to Repentance: The Samaritan Woman St. John 4:5–42 “He...

info_outline
Homily - The Paralytic and Moving from Explanation to Obedience show art Homily - The Paralytic and Moving from Explanation to Obedience

OrthoAnalytika

On the Sunday of the Paralytic, this homily explores Christ’s piercing question: “Do you want to be made well?” It examines our tendency to respond not with repentance, but with explanation—justifying our condition rather than opening ourselves to healing. Grounded in the Church’s therapeutic vision of salvation, it calls us to move beyond self-justification and into obedience, where Christ’s command becomes the source of our transformation.  Enjoy the show!  --- Homily for the Sunday of the Paralytic John 5:1–15; Acts 9 Christ is risen! What effect do you have on...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Galatians 5:22-26; 6:1-2

Freedom is more than independence from tyranny—it is the freedom to become what we were created to be. Reflecting on St. Paul's teaching about the fruit of the Spirit, this homily explores how the Christian life is a lifelong journey of growth, repentance, and transformation. Christ has already won the decisive victory; our task is simply to remain united to Him and let His life bear fruit within us.  Enjoy the show!

---

Notes:

This weekend our nation celebrates the Declaration of Independence. Whatever else one thinks about our country's history—and there is certainly plenty to celebrate and plenty to repent of—the Declaration itself is a remarkable document.

It is, first, a rejection. It rejects tyranny. It rejects the idea that human beings exist merely to serve the ambitions of earthly rulers.

But it is also a commitment. It commits a people to a new way of life, built upon certain convictions about human dignity, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

Now, if we're honest, those words have never perfectly described America at any point in her history. But they do describe what Americans have continually aspired to become. They are ideals by which each generation measures itself, calls itself to repentance, and tries once again to live more faithfully.

As your priest, I'm not terribly interested in convincing you about apple pie, hot dogs, and patriotism. I mention this because it gives us a helpful analogy for today's epistle.

Christianity and our own life in Christ also begins with a declaration. 

We have rejected tyranny. Not simply the tyranny of earthly rulers, but the tyranny of sin, death, and the passions.

We have united ourselves to Christ, the One who is Himself Life, Liberty, Truth, and the source of every good thing.

But just as the Declaration did not instantly produce a perfect nation, Baptism does not instantly produce a perfect Christian.

So St. Paul asks us, in effect, "How are we doing?"

Not how are we feeling. Not what opinions do we hold. Not which controversies have we won or followed online. But what fruit is growing? 

Let’s look at the list:

Love.

Is my heart becoming more capable of loving people who irritate me, disappoint me, or disagree with me?

Joy.

Not entertainment. Not excitement. But that quiet confidence that Christ is risen and therefore nothing essential can ever be taken from me.

Peace.

Or am I continually agitated by politics, by the news, by social media, by the next crisis that promises to be the end of civilization?

Patience.

Especially with those whose spiritual growth is slower than I think it ought to be—or perhaps slower than my own.

Kindness.

Goodness.

Faithfulness.

Gentleness.

Self-control.

Notice how ordinary these are.

St. Paul isn't describing spectacular miracles.

He is describing the slow transformation of the human heart.

And that's especially important for those who have recently entered the Church.

Many converts—and if we're honest, cradle Orthodox too—expect to become saints in about six months.  (And the expectation of instant gratification really has become more American than apple pie!)

Then they discover they still struggle with anger. Still become impatient. Still have distracting thoughts during prayer. Still fall into old habits. Still have days when joy seems very far away.

St. Paul isn't surprised by any of this. He doesn't say, "If you fail once, perhaps you were never really a Christian." He says, "The fruit of the Spirit is ..."

Fruit grows. Fruit takes seasons. Fruit appears because the tree remains alive.

And if you stumble along the way?

He immediately tells us what the Church is supposed to do.

"If a man is overtaken in any trespass, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness."

Restore him.

Not shame him. Not crush him.

Restore him.

And then, "Bear one another's burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ."

This is what the Church is. This is what this parish is. Not a gathering of people who have already become perfect. But a family helping one another keep walking toward Christ. Because here is the Gospel.

The tyranny has already been overthrown. Christ has already conquered sin. Christ has already conquered death. Christ has already opened Paradise. The victory does not depend on tomorrow's election. Or the next war. Or picking the winner in the latest internet controversy. Or lamenting the newest heresy making the rounds on YouTube.

Christ reigns.

Our task is not to panic. Our task is not to become experts in every cultural battle. 

Our task is to live by the Spirit.

To keep returning to Christ, so that it is:

Christ with me,
Christ before me,
Christ behind me,
Christ in me,
and Christ beneath me,”

To keep opening the eyes of the heart—the noetic faculty God has given us—to receive the grace that He never ceases to pour out.

Because the more we abide in Him, the more His life becomes our life.

And then, slowly, almost without noticing it, love grows. Joy grows. Peace grows. Patience grows.

Kindness. Goodness. Faithfulness. Gentleness. Self-control.

That is what freedom looks like.

Not merely freedom from tyranny.

Freedom for communion with God.

And that is the independence worth celebrating every day of our lives.

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.