+ Alexy’s Response to Muslim Theologians

In cleaning out last year’s “draft blog files” I came upon the following letter by the late Patriarch of Russia, published in the spring of 2008. (A very worthy read.)

Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia:
Response to the open letter of 138 Muslim theologians

I would like to thank all the Muslim religious leaders and scholars who sent an open letter to representatives of Christian Churches and organizations including the primate of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Christians and Muslims have many similar aims, and we can unite our efforts to achieve them. However, this unity will not occur if we fail to clarify our understanding of each other’s religious values. In this connection, I welcome the desire of the Muslim community to begin a sincere and open dialogue with representatives of Christians Churches on a serious scholarly and intellectual level.

Christianity and Islam are engaged today in a very important task in the world. They seek to remind humanity of the existence of God and of the spiritual dimension present both in man and the world. We bear witness to the interdependence of peace and justice, morality and law, truth and love.

As you rightly put in your letter, Christians and Muslims are drawn together first of all by the commandment of the love of God and the love of one’s neighbor. At the same time, I do not think it is worthwhile for us to identify a certain minimum that seems to fix our convergences in faith and to be theologically sufficient for the individual’s religious life. Any doctrinal affirmation in Christianity or Islam cannot be viewed in isolation from its unique place in the integral theological system. Otherwise, one’s religious identity will be obliterated to give rise to a danger of moving along the path of blending the faiths. It seems to be more fruitful, therefore, to study the integral faith of each side and to compare them.

In Christianity, a discourse about love of God and love of one’s neighbor is impossible without a discourse about God. According to the New Testament revelation, God is revealed to human beings as Love. “Whoever does not love does not know God, because God is love” (1 John. 4, 8). “And so we know and rely on the love God has for us. God is love. Whoever lives in love lives in God, and God in him” (1 John. 4, 16). One cannot help seeing in this an indication that the Divine nature itself also has love as its most essential, characteristic and important property.

A lonely isolated essence can love only itself: self-love is not love. Love always presupposes the existence of the other. Just as an individual cannot be aware of himself as personality but only through his communication with other personalities, there cannot be personal being in God but through love of another personal being. That is why the New Testament speaks of God as one Being in three Persons – the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. God is the unity of three Persons who have the same divine nature, which belongs to each of them in its fullness so that they are not three but one God. God the Trinity is the fullness of love with each hypostatic Person bespeaking love towards the other two hypostatic Persons. The Persons of the Trinity are aware of themselves as “I and you”: “just as you are in me and I am in you” (John. 17, 21), Christ says to the Father. “He will bring glory to me by taking from what is mine and making it known to you”, Christ says about the Holy Spirit (John. 16, 14). Therefore, every Hypostasis in the Trinity refers to the other Hypostasis, and, according to St. Maxim the Confessor, it is “eternal movement [of the Trinity] in love”.

It is only through the knowledge of God as love that the individual can come to the true knowledge of His being and His other properties. The love of God, not any other property of the Divine nature, is the main principle and the main driving force of Divine Providence for humanity in the cause of its salvation: “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life” (John. 3, 16).

The Christian teaching on the incarnation of God the Word in Jesus Christ is also a natural manifestation of God’s love of human beings. “This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins” (1 John. 4, 9-10).

Man, created in the image and after the likeness of God (Gen. 1, 26), is able to experience Him in himself and, thus, come to know the love that God has for him. God’s love is communicated to human beings to become their inner property, their living force that determines, penetrates and forms their whole lives. Love in man arises in response to God’s love. “How great is the love the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God!” (1 John. 3, 1). God expects from man not so much a slave’s devotion as filial feeling of love. Therefore, in the main prayer that the Lord Jesus Christ has taught Christians to say (Luke. 11, 2), man appeals to God as his Heavenly Father.

The manifestation of man’s true love of God is possible only if man is free. This freedom makes it possible to do good by fulfilling the will of God by choice, not only out of fear or for the sake of reward. The love of God inspires in man the selfless desire to fulfill His commandments. For, according to St. Isaac the Syrian, “Because of His great love, God was not pleased to restrict our freedom but was pleased to draw us near Him through the love of our own heart”. Therefore, human freedom increases, extends and grows stronger as human beings grow in love of God, which is the core of human religious and moral perfection. Those who love God seek to emulate their Creator in their actions: “Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect” (Matt. 5, 48).

My letter does not have the aim of setting forth the entire Christian theology. I only offer an example of reflection on God’s love of man and man’s love of God, which underlie the whole theological system of Christianity and which cannot be reduced to a few laconic formulations. It is my conviction that Christian and Muslim thinkers would benefit from regular studies of each other’s doctrines in their fullness. In this connection, it seems desirable to develop a doctrinal Christian-Islamic dialogue to broaden academic and research cooperation, to study doctrinal affirmations, to create an in-depth basis for developing multifaceted cooperation between our two religious communities.

The doctrinal dialogue between the Orthodox Church and Islam has considerably intensified recently. This happened not only because we have to communicate more intensively and to build societal life together, but also because Christians and Muslims have come to face the same challenges which are impossible to meet on one’s own. We have together encountered a pressure from the anti-religious worldview that claims universality and seeks to subject all the spheres of life in society. We are also witnesses to attempts to assert a ‘new morality’ that contradicts the moral norms supported by traditional religions. We should be together to face these challenges.

Some people among both Christians and Muslims have expressed fears that the development of interreligious dialogue may lead to religious syncretism, a review of the doctrines and obliterated borders between religious traditions. Time has shown however that a reasonable system of cooperation between religions helps to preserve and emphasize the unique nature and identity of each of them. Moreover, the development of appropriate forms of interreligious dialogue in itself has proved to be a serious obstacle for manipulations aimed to establish a kind of universal super-religion.

Unfortunately, I have to state that our religions do have enemies who would like to see Christians and Muslims clash, on the one hand, or to bring them to a false ‘unity’ based on religious and moral indifference, thus giving priority to purely secular concerns, on the other. Therefore we as religious leaders need each other, so that our faithful may preserve their identity in the changing world.

Noteworthy in this connection is the experience of co-existence between Christianity and Islam in Russia. The traditional religions in our country have never come into conflict while preserving their identity for a thousand years. Russia is one of those rare multi-religious and multinational states whose history has not known the religious wars that have plagued various regions of the world.

The basic religious and ethical principles held by the traditional faiths in Russia invariably guided their followers toward cooperation with people of other religions and beliefs in the spirit of peace and harmony. Various religious communities lived side-by-side, working together and defending together their common Motherland. Nevertheless, they stood firm in the faith of their own forefathers, safeguarding it against encroachments from outside and often doing so together in face of invaders from other countries. To this day, our compatriots have not come into any real conflict between them based on religious grounds. In this way, an affective system of interreligious relations based on mutual respect and good-neighborliness was established in Russia.

In today’s Russia, there is an important mechanism for interreligious dialogue, namely, the Interreligious Council in Russia, which has been working fruitfully and successfully for over ten years now. Its example and experience have proved to be attractive for the independent states, which have been formed in the post-Soviet space. Religious leaders in these countries have formed a CIS Inter-religious Council. Through these two bodies, together we seek to meet the various challenges of today and to show to the whole world a positive experience of peaceful coexistence and cooperation between Orthodox Christians and Muslims who have lived in the same society for centuries. As is known, in other Christian countries, too, Muslims have had opportunities for developing their religious life freely.

In many Muslim countries, Christians have enjoyed invariable support and have the freedom to live according to their own religious rules. But in some Islamic countries, the legislation prohibits the construction of churches, worship services and free Christian preaching. I hope that the letter of Islamic religious leaders and scholars proposing to intensify dialogue between our two religions will contribute to establishing better conditions for Christian minorities in such countries.

Doctrinally our dialogue could deal with such important themes as the teaching on God, man and the world. At the same time, on the practical plane the Christian-Muslim cooperation could be aimed at safeguarding the role of religion in public life, struggling with the defamation of religion, overcoming intolerance and xenophobia, protecting holy places, preserving places of worship and promoting joint peace initiatives.

It is my conviction that it is precisely the Christians and the Muslims that should initiate inter-religious dialogue on regional and global levels. Therefore, in the framework of international organizations, it seems useful to create mechanisms that make it possible to be more sensitive to the spiritual and cultural traditions of various peoples.

Once again I would like to thank all the Muslim scholars and religious leaders for their open letter. I hope for further fruitful cooperation both in theological dialogue and social sphere.

English translation: DECR Moscow Patriarchate

Source

See also response to this initiative.

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Orthodixie Podcast Year-in-Review

Below are the hyper-linked blog titles, AFR blurbs, and links (pop-up & direct) to the 2008 Orthodixie Podcasts on Ancient Faith Radio. It’s been a fun year; I appreciate your support, emails, and comments.

Thanks for listening!

January 5 – House Blessing at Mr. Potato Head’s

Theophany and House Blessings. What happens in the service, in our homes, and in our lives.

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January 11 – My Cup (of Joe) Runneth Over

A brief history of the coffee hour, with some suggestions about how best to use the time as you sip your morning brew!

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January 18 – Hello Jiddo, Hello Yaya

No matter what you call your grandparents, go to Church Camp, write home, and beware the Mama Eater.

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January 26Nojoyatall

Fr Joseph, with help from Fr Thomas Hopko and Elder Porphyrios, delves into the malady known as Nojoyatall.

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February 1 – Your Day, On The Floor … Jelly Side Up

Fr Joseph reviews the rules of life, particularly Murphy’s Law and its variants, and and then provides us with a rule we can all live with.

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February 9 – Orthodoxy in Dixie

This week’s Podcast is taken from the book, “One Flew Over the Onion Dome” – any similarities to your own parish, bishop or jurisdiction is purely intentional. Orthodoxy not available in all states. In your area, it may only be available in a foreign language – in which case, your mileage may vary …

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February 15 – Without Love, It’s All Just Peas and Carrots

Miss Jane gets a tongue lashing, Mr. Bodine speaks in tongues. Things go dark as Fr. Joseph interviews Dr. Indadark. In the end, lacking the main ingredient, it’s all just peas and carrots. Suffice it to say: Love covers a multitude of podcasts.

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February 22 – Reality: The First Step Toward Salvation

This week, Fr Joseph gets real: “The thing about Confession is that it is natural. That is, it is Real. Almost everything else we do with our sin is false and unnatural. We punish ourselves, justify our actions, and hide. Yet, in Confession — in opening ourselves to God the Light — we expose the hypocrisy of our double life. In truth, we’ve been living a lie. Without Confession, Absolution, and Reconciliation we live a lie before God and Man as if it were Reality. In reality, no one is fooled — not our neighbor, not ourselves. And, let’s be real, certainly not God.”

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February 29 – Fasting Songs

Ladies & Gentlemen, prepare yourself, it’s almost that time; time to cue your favorite theme song for the upcoming Lenten Fast! Perhaps the theme song from Star Wars? Or maybe we could sing a fasting song, during this election year, to the tune of “Hail to the Chief?” Then again, there’s always the Beverly Hillbillies …

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March 7 – Two Miles ‘til Pascha

Fr Joseph reveals one of his Lenten pet peeves: “Do the best you can.” Do the best you can? Now brothers and sisters, that’s a recipe for failure. Heck, sinner that I am, the best I can is what has got me to where I am! We don’t give an inexperienced bunch of players a ball – with no practice whatsoever – and say, “Okay, it’s game time. Do the best you can.” No. We practice and practice and practice. We fall down, get back up; struggle to do better.

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March 15 – Fasters Anonymous ala Gilligan’s Isle

Fr Joseph, struggling toward humility in the first week of the Fast, tells of his first visit to Fasters Anonymous … and their curious theme song.

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March 22 – The Healing of Yuck

Much like the pains of labor endured by a mother bearing a child, sometimes our journey back to healing is a painful one. And yet, the joy that comes with the new birth is far greater — inexplicably greater — than that which our cold heart endured. In the meantime, we must begin where we are.

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March 29 – What Kind Of Fool Are You?

Fr Joseph quotes Chicago, Kevorkian, Ben Franklin, St Paul and Hallmark in making a case for April Fools.

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April 4 – Happy … EIEIO!

Letters have been pouring into the Orthodixie headquarters over the past week, many of them dealing with what can only be said and not written. You’ve all no doubt heard it, it is pronounced ******** (or EIEIO). Fr Joseph tries to allay fears [of EIEIO] while assuring us that “this, too, shall pass.”

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April 12 – A Funny Thing, Sex

Fr. Joseph’s way of saying, “Pardon me while I slip into something a little more… serious.”

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April 19 – Here Comes Peter Cottontail?

So tell us, Father Joseph– just how did the Resurrection of our Lord get mixed up with bunnies, chocolate and eggs?

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April 27 – Past Fast

Fr. Joseph reports on this year’s Lenten Superlative Awards Banquet at St. Kismet in Gethsemane Falls. Last year’s gala saw a total of 13 awards being presented to the best and worst participants in the Great Fast. This year’s big celeb is, ahem, a no brainer!

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May 3 – Do You Have What It Takes?

Fr. Joseph encounters Bible floppers, hip-hoppers, and mountain toppers in his quest to discover … What It Takes.

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May 9 – “He’s in a better place” … than Dixie?

Fr. Joseph tackles the subject of “place” — where we come from and where we’re headed. Your departed mom, your dad, sister, brother or spouse: they are on that mysterious journey. It’s only a better place if Love is there … let’s pray that includes all of us.

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May 17 – Joy Comes in the Mourning (Dove)

Fr. Joseph recounts holding Easter colored chicks… holding a BB gun, his eye on a sparrow… and later, standing outside in the rain wearing a ball cap, oven mitts and holding a napkin-covered lacrosse stick, chanting, “Here birdie, birdie, birdie.” Yes, this week’s podcast is for the birds.

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May 24 – The Ear Bird (The Angel Cried) Gets the Worm

Fr. Joseph tells of his recent visit to a psychiatrist and his annual struggle with The Guess Who.

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May 31 – Ortho-Man!

Due to some pretty sweet connections, Fr. Joseph is allowed a peek at the upcoming summer blockbuster, ORTHO-MAN! Is there a role for Acrivia Man? Economia Man? What would an Orthodox superhero wear? Was Popeye Greek Orthodox? Some answers, and some questions begging your help, all in this week’s podcast.

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June 6 – Ortho-Man And The Confusion of Tongues

In this week’s Ortho-Man sequel, Fr. Joseph can’t understand the movie, gets knocked out, smells garlic, dreams of Popeye, quotes St Nicholai of Zica and ponders the mysterious identity of Psssst Man.

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June 14 – Ortho-Man & the Riddle of the Psssssst!

In the third and final episode of Ortho-Man, Fr. Joseph is led down a dark hallway by a mysterious stranger who reveals to him the similarities of Underdog, Batman, Pink Panther, Indiana Jones, Buzz Lightyear and … Ortho-Man.

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June 21 – Bless Your Heart – Smallah, Smallah, Smallah

What do you get when you mix the language and culture of the South with the long and rich heritage of the “Old Country?” Get ready to smile in this encore presentation!

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June 28 – Jesus Loves You (But)

Actions speak louder than words. Some words acquire different meanings depending on context. And love, well, love changes everything. But …

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July 13 – Gotta Go To Camp Now

Fr. John Monto joins Fr. Joseph Huneycutt for a week at Camp St Raphael. This week’s podcast offers an audio snapshot — including the soon-to-be-classic “DOWAMA Don’t Let Your Campers Grow Up to be Clergy” and the new smash hit, “Gotta Go To Camp Now.” Enjoy!

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July 19 – Recalculating Our GPS

Is there virtue in being lost? Not exactly. Then again, being found is only worthy when the Finder is the Hound that loves you. Fr. Joseph’s sense of direction is a little different (i.e., nonexistent). Truth is, most of the time, he doesn’t know where he is.

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July 26 – Help! There’s An Iconostasis In My Living Room

You know how strange dreams can be when you’re not sleeping in your own bed? Well, this one ranks up there with the strangest. But, Fr. Joseph has a very practical application in this “Best Of” Orthodixie podcast.

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August 2 – An Empty Church Is A Peaceful Church

Listen to this exclusive encore “interview” with the author of a book (wink, wink) on proper church etiquette.

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August 9 – Expect a Miracle!

From Oral Roberts to Black Oak Arkansas, strange things happen. Whoa! There goes Uncle Ernie runnin’ ’round the church! Then, there’s bread and wine. Oh, you’ll just have to listen (no interpretation necessary).

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August 18 – Me – Adam, You – Helpmeet

This week’s podcast features snippets from “The Newlywed Game” taken from a Couples Retreat at St Joseph Antiochian Orthodox Church in Houston, Texas.

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August 23 – Who’s in Your Icon Corner?

Icon Corners can be like a family scrapbook — and, God willing, vice versa. While moving the family prayer corner, Fr. Joseph remembers prayers answered through the intercessions of the Saints.

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August 30 – The Xenia, Galina, Coinkydink

We’ve all heard “Coincidence is God’s way of remaining anonymous.” Fr. Joseph finds that hard to believe. Then again, some things which are hard to explain serve as cures for our unbelief. Is that by coincidence?

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September 6 – The Handicapped Convert

While “rugged individualism” may be a cultural trait, it sure won’t save you; and although blindness is a serious handicap, Converts may insist on being in the driver’s seat. Whether we want it or not, American Orthodox Converts need help.

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September 17 – The Ike & Rita (“Turners”) Review

This week’s episode, not nearly as exciting as visuals of a major hurricane slamming a major city, is a personal reflection on former Houston guests: Gustav, Katrina, Ike and Rita.

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September 18 – Orthodoxy: Christianity, Just Harder

Interviews and arguments, struggles and slogans, one thing’s certain: Orthodoxy ain’t easy — and that’s no small thing. Or, is it?

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October 5 – Mr. B. Al Zeebop, Orthodox Christian Anarchist

From rumors and whispering campaigns, to flattery and praise, the Church is able to weather any storm. However, the temptations may prove too much for the fair-weather (or even the foul-weather) faithful laity and clergy. In this episode, Fr. Joseph meets Mr. B. Al “Buba” Zeebop and his devilish operation.

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October 11 – The Frost Is On The Pumpkin

Has the latest news about the election, international struggles and the economy got you down? Well, take heart and fear not — for the frost, my friends, is on the pumpkin!

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October 25 – Putting the Fun in Dysfunction Since AD 33

Fr. Joseph delivers a brief newscast (sponsored by e-Hirearchy.com®) featuring Orthodox stories from around the country including this week’s Person of the Week.

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November 2 – Daylight Saviour Time

What time is it anyway? In this classic podcast from the last time we set our clocks back, Fr. Joseph reflects on our obsession with time as a culture and the impact it has on our priorities.

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November 8 – Letters From The Old Country

This week, Fr Joseph answers questions from AFR listeners. Topics include: annoying Orthodox phrases, wicked political emails, Palestine, women’s ordination, and Waffle House.

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November 15 – A Tooth, A Truck And A (Paffhausen)

What does a root canal, a story from Greek mythology and the OCA have in common?

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November 22 – Much Ado About Despota

Nothing excites a priest quite like a Bishop’s visit, and you just never know what a Bishop might say. For instance, how would you answer the question: “Will there be only Christians in heaven?”

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December 1 – Here Comes Santa!

In this encore presentation, Fr. Joseph talks to us about Santa Claus and his sons– and his own– imagination.

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December 6 – Simply Having a Wonderful Christmas … Carol?

Fr. Joseph joins Sir Paul McCartney, Alvin Chipmunk, José Feliciano and other Wailers in a journey down memory lane — eschewing the worldly sounds of the season for some really bad (ghostly) percussion moments. Are you prepared?

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December 13 – The Ghost Of Past Christmas Presents

What do Charles Dickens, Buzz Lightyear, Vladimir Lossky, the Carolina Panthers, the Baltimore Colts, Angels, Shepherds, George Frideric Handel and Kawasaki all have in common? Surely to goodness nothing but this podcast! Fr Joseph is visited by another “ghost.”

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December 19 – Baby Jesus By The Chimney

In this encore presentation, Fr. Joseph sets out on a search for the Baby Jesus.

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December 27 – Meletios Metaxakis Makes a Maalox Moment

Tackling the differences among the Gregorian, Julian, and Appalachian Calendars concerning the date of Christmas is nothing new — and can be quite the tongue twister.

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May the Lord bless you and yours in 2009!

Pray for me.

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Meletios Metaxakis Makes a Maalox Moment

To the tune of O Tannenbaum (O Christmas Tree)

Meletios Metaxakis,
Makes a Maalox Moment
Our calendar was growing slow
Brought forth through Ceasar long ago …

Meletios Metaxakis,
Makes a Maalox Moment
How often these days do we fight
O’er calendars, who’s wrong – who’s right?

Meletios Metaxakis
Makes a Maalox Moment
Our hope and dream will ever be
That calends soon shall all agree.
Meletios Metaxikis …

ahem!

Okay, a bit of back story …

The Orthodixie Podcast on Ancient Faith Radio.

(Or, just listen right here.)

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Redeeming Regifting

Ladies and gentlemen, it’s high time that a very sensitive topic was dealt with openly and honestly …

I’m speaking, of course, about REGIFTING.

Oh, come on — some of you are guilty. You didn’t want that sweatshirt, that cookie jar, that Chia Pet …

So, you did what anyone who doesn’t regularly host yard sales would do. Out of, ahem, love, you turned around and gave that bulky shirt or colored piece of plastic to someone else.

What’s that you say? You’ve never done that?

Then, let me ask you: Have you ever received that odd sweatshirt, cookie jar, or Chia Pet? Yes, well, you are most likely a recipient of regifting.

However, there is one gift that can be regifted over and over again and everyone’s the better – the wiser – for it.

That’s right. I’m speaking here of your charitable gift to the continuing ministry of Ancient Faith Radio.

Someone gave you some money? – your boss, your mom, your neighbor, maybe even your enemy?

They just GAVE it to you?

Well, I’m encouraging you – especially NOW — to regift it!

Because every dollar you give to the ministry of Ancient Faith Radio between now and December 31st will be doubled (up to $10,0000)!

That’s right …

Regift your money to AFR between now and the end of the year – and that gift will be matched with funds from a generous individual donor — until AFR reaches the combined total of $20,000!

So, come on! This is guiltless regifting!

Times 2!

Let’s all join together during this holy season and quickly match this gift with whatever amount we’re able to share.

Wishing you and yours a happy & blessed Nativity Season – and, on behalf of Ancient Faith Radio

thanking you in advance
.

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Jesus Was a Jay Dub?

Honestly, if I fell, backwards, into a black worm hole in outer space, where the celebration of Christmas is not dictated by the rotations of the earth, but by the beta carotene on the skin of one’s teeth, I could not possibly begin to answer your query (given the manner in which it is fashioned) …

All of us are born in the presence of our mother.

Yet, for Christians, the Church is our Mother; we are (re)born through Her font and therein begins our salvation with our “new family”. “Christianity” is not mentioned at all in the New Testament; “Church” is mentioned 117 times.

“Christmas” is not synonymous with “Birthday” …

I could go on, but prudence hinders; I beg your forgiveness.

The above is a portion of comment left on GetReligion regarding this post, this comment. Suddenly it seems we’ve all devolved into Jehovah’s Witnesses, as witnessed by the following post from a publication out of Chattanooga:

What Would Jesus Think Of Santa?

From what I’ve read of the words that Jesus is reported to have said, and what I gather of his character from the words about him as written up in the Bible, I believe he would be more impressed with the tradition of Santa Claus and the giving of gifts to children than he would be with the rites and rituals associated with the celebration of his birth.

While there is nothing wrong with a believer’s personal remembrance of the birth of Jesus, I suspect that Jesus would feel a little embarrassment over the paganizing of the event and all the humbuggery it evokes from those who insist on reminding the rest how pious and good they are at this time every year.

While Jesus had a lot to say regarding how a person should act, such as going to his closet to pray rather than making a big deal about it in public, he never came close to suggesting that his birth should be celebrated in the heathen manner that the Church has promoted over the centuries and the way it continues to be celebrated today.

It would honor his birth more if we followed his advice, such as the views he expressed in his Sermon on the Mount, than holding on to the pagan practices of staged adoration with all the unnecessary trappings and trimmings that don’t have a thing in the world to do with anything that he preached.

So, it’s Christmas, Dec. 25, a date that the Church claims was the birthday of Jesus, even though there is no way to know the actual date that Jesus was born. Fine. But why prescribe a holiness to any day more than another? I guess it is just what Christians and Jews and Moslems like to do, the same as pagans and heathens and other religions I suppose. They just believe in their holy days because of their religions and traditions.

It’s a sad irony that while we hold Christmas as holy, we don’t allow it to stop us from making war and killing people in great numbers on Christmas and throughout the Christmas season. When it comes to war and killing, every day is the same as another for us. Humanity would be a lot better off if human life was considered holy and any day was just as good as the next.

If Jesus could look down at it all, I’m sure he would be much more pleased with the tradition of Santa giving gifts to the children and all the pleasant happiness that comes from the spirit of giving than he would with all the rites and rituals and sanctimonious observations and humbuggery that the loud preachers and noisy laymen make so much hay and ado over in celebration of his alleged birthday.

Yes, well, there it is.

Sigh.

There’s much work to do.
(Mainly on me.)
So from further comment I shall refrain …
‘cept to say:


Christ is Born!

Glorify Him!

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