li Bringing Old Testament Stories to Life, and to Our Lives By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-11-27T22:40:00+00:00 Is there a way to approach the Old Testament with our children in a fascinating and dimensional way? Elissa encourages us to teach Old Testament stories on three different levels. Full Article
li Let There Be Light: Science, Orthodoxy, and our Youth By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-06-04T19:42:55+00:00 Elissa talks with Alisa Rakich-Brooks, author of Let There Be Light, the first in a new series of Orthodox children's books, about how our children are experiencing the relationship between religion and science and steps we might take to frame scientific inquiry in an Orthodox light. Full Article
li Parenting: Struggling Toward Salvation By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-10-30T17:47:03+00:00 In honor of Parenting Month at Ancient Faith, Raising Saints is flipping it around: instead of talking about how adults can feed the faith of children, we're considering the impact this process has on the parents, and the many ways in which raising saints can transform one into a saint. Full Article
li When Kids Don't Like Church By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-12-16T01:06:15+00:00 Elissa takes a look at a question from a friend: How do we handle it when an older child doesn't want to go to church? Can't we just worship from home? Why does it matter and how do you teach that? Full Article
li The End of the Line By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-29T02:40:12+00:00 Fr. Michael talks about charismatic Protestant Christianity. Full Article
li Greener Grass - The Single Life By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-29T02:42:25+00:00 Fr. Michael concludes his two-part series on discussing the comparison between vocations: marriage, monasticism, and singleness. Full Article
li Why Does Life Have to be So Hard? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-29T02:42:57+00:00 Fr. Michael gives some answers to the age-old question of why life is hard. Full Article
li Like Jonah in the Whale By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-03T00:42:44+00:00 Fr. Michael shares a quote and reflections from Jim Forest's book, Living with Wisdom: A Life of Thomas Merton, "I find myself traveling to my destiny in the belly of a paradox." Full Article
li What Does God Look Like? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-03T01:42:50+00:00 Fr. Michael answers the familiar question, "If God is real, why isn't it obvious to everyone?" Full Article
li The Three Degrees of Knowledge: An Exploration of Theosis in the Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:00:19+00:00 Fr. Michael shares reflections from his presentation on Theosis at the Orthodox Institute, held this past weekend at Antiochian Village. This is Part 1. Full Article
li The Three Degrees of Knowledge: An Exploration of Theosis in the Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:01:22+00:00 Fr. Michael shares reflections from his presentation on Theosis at the Orthodox Institute, held earlier this month at Antiochian Village. This is Part 2. Full Article
li The Three Degrees of Knowledge: An Exploration of Theosis in the Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:02:31+00:00 Fr. Michael shares reflections from his presentation on Theosis at the Orthodox Institute, held earlier this month at Antiochian Village. This is Part 3. Full Article
li The Three Degrees of Knowledge: An Exploration of Theosis in the Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:04:20+00:00 Fr. Michael shares reflections from his presentation on Theosis at the Orthodox Institute, held earlier this month at Antiochian Village. This is Part 4. Full Article
li The Three Degrees of Knowledge: An Exploration of Theosis in the Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:05:36+00:00 Fr. Michael shares reflections from his presentation on Theosis at the Orthodox Institute, held last month at Antiochian Village. This is Part 5. Full Article
li The Three Degrees of Knowledge: An Exploration of Theosis in the Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:06:52+00:00 Fr. Michael concludes his reflections from his presentation on Theosis at the Orthodox Institute, held last month at Antiochian Village. This is Part 6. Here is a link to the written text of his presentation: holynativity.blogspot.com/2014/11/st-isaacs-three-degrees-of-knowledge.html. Full Article
li We Have a Little Garden By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-09-07T03:09:25+00:00 Fr. Michael shares about lessons learned from a poem by author Beatrix Potter and why he doesn't have a bucket list. Full Article
li More Thoughts on Movies, Holiness, and Brownies By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:09:18+00:00 Fr. Michael continues his discussion from last week. "We should not teach our children that anything outside us can defile us.... The defilement is already in our hearts and what we avoid, we avoid because it stirs up the disordered passions of my heart." Full Article
li A Christ-like Response to ISIS By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:16:29+00:00 Fr. Michael shares his thoughts about how Christians can respond to violence in our world. "One cannot help being deeply troubled by the latest wave of persecution against Christians perpetrated by the ISIS movement. It is a terrible situation that demands from Christians everywhere some sort of response. To do nothing seems intolerable. We feel we must respond, but how?" Full Article
li Accidental Humility By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:19:06+00:00 Fr. Michael shares from Homily 24 from St. Isaac the Syrian. "“Everything that can be perceived by the senses, whether an action or a word, is a manifestation of something hidden within.” Full Article
li A Small Affliction Borne for God's Sake By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:54:54+00:00 Fr. Michael reflects on this quote from St. Isaac the Syrian (Homily 36), "A small affliction borne for God’s sake is better before God than a great work performed without tribulation; for affliction willingly borne brings to light the proof of love…." Full Article
li Muddling through the Snirt of this World By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T05:01:10+00:00 Many of us have had mountain-top experiences at one time in our life or another. We have had times when God seemed right there, so close that, at that moment it seemed like nothing to offer God everything, to sacrifice all for the sake of Christ. These mountain-top experiences, at least for me, are very few and far between. It is a kind of miracle when this happens. But like most miracles, it happens not so that we don’t have to suffer, don’t have to slog through the rest of life on the plains. Rather, God gives us these moments as signs, as encouragement to keep us on the way, as a foretaste so that we know what the coming main meal will be. But the wonderful experience of nearness to God soon passes and we find ourselves back in the world, back in the arena of our salvation, back now having to fulfill the promise of giving our life to God. On the mountain top it seemed that it would be so easy, but on the plains, in the mud and snirt (a Canadian term referring to snow mixed with dirt), in the messiness of the lives we actually live, giving our life to God is much more difficult and messy than we ever imagined it would be. Full Article
li Could A New-Ager Benefit From Orthodox Spirituality? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:08:20+00:00 As an Evangelical, I had been taught that everything that is really important (spiritually speaking) has to do introducing people to Jesus Christ. Presenting Christ was almost everything. I believed that once one was reconciled with God through Christ–which I understood to be a legal transaction–everything that was really important in one’s relationship with God had been taken care of. This assumption, or something very like it, pervades Evangelical writing. Full Article
li Humility and the Unseen Martyrdom By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:24:27+00:00 Fr. Michael shares his reflections on St. Isaac the Syrian's response to the question, "If, after a man has greatly toiled, laboured, and struggled, the thought of pride shamelessly assails him—taking occasion from the beauty of his virtues—and reckons up the magnitude of his toil, by what means should he restrain his thoughts and achieve such security in his soul as not to be persuaded by it?" Full Article
li Individualism and Charismatic Delusion By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:38:57+00:00 In an on-going discussion with my inquiring friend today, I respond to two questions. First, why do traditional Christians call priests father; and second, why do we pray to saints (i.e. why don’t we just go to God ourselves)? Orthodoxy assumes that it takes a “village” to raise a Christian. And not just a village of people who live in the same time and place, but a village that includes all of our holy Fathers and Mothers who have gone before us. When we come to God, we come with everyone, never by ourselves. Full Article
li Talking About Sexual Immorality By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:40:52+00:00 Fr. Michael reflects on a sermon by St. Gregory Palamas about barbarian invasions and sexual sins. Full Article
li The Almost Blind Leading the Almost Blind: Theosis For Those Who Do Not See Very Well By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:43:52+00:00 It seems as though the nearer I draw to God, the farther away I realize I am. The more I realize, the less I understand. People sometimes ask me about certainty: “How can you be certain about your faith in God?” Honestly, I gave up certainty years ago. The only thing I am certain of is my utter dependence on the mercy of God. Full Article
li St. Isaac's Warning Applied to Advice From Holy Elders By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:45:18+00:00 In Homily 42, St. Isaac the Syrian makes an interesting statement about spiritual guidance. He says, “Do not seek advice from a man who does not lead a life similar to your own, even if he be very wise.” St. Isaac goes on, “Confide your thoughts to a man who, though he lack learning, has experience in things, rather than to a learned philosopher who speaks on the basis of speculations, having no actual experience.” For St. Isaac, and many Orthodox spiritual writers, both ancient and modern, it is very important to seek advice from those who have actually lived and experienced the things that you are seeking advice about. Full Article
li Humility and Patience in Trials By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:50:09+00:00 Patience, according to St. Isaac the Syrian, can cut in half the adversity and affliction one experiences in trials, regardless of the source. Full Article
li Disciplines, the Shifting Meaning of Words, and the Narrow Way By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:52:12+00:00 In Homily 43, St. Isaac speaks of three areas of ‘discipline,’ or areas in which we must guide or rule our life. Proper discipline in these areas leads to purity. These three areas are bodily discipline, leading to purification of the body; discipline of the mind, leading to purification of the soul; and spiritual discipline, leading to purification of the mind. Full Article
li What Does Asceticism Look Like? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T05:00:21+00:00 As we make our way through the ‘Great Arena of the Fast,’ let’s be careful how we suggest or inform one another about the ascetical practices and traditions that are provided for us in the Orthodox Church. The goal is holiness, not conformity. Let’s not forget Jesus’ warning to the Jewish lawyers when He said of them that they load people down with burdens hard to bear but do not lift a finger to help them. Full Article
li Speaking of Silence and Boasting of Humility By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:03:25+00:00 I feel a little crazy sometimes, like an idiot—not a godly, holy idiot, just a plain, old-fashioned idiot: the kind that boasts of humility and speaks about the virtue of silence. Full Article
li Patience: What Growth In Christ Looks Like By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:15:26+00:00 Deciding to follow Christ or repenting from a besetting sin is only the first step in a very long journey. St. Isaac the Syrian likens this walk with Christ to a soft drop that hallows out a hard rock. It is not the gush of water caused by a sudden cloudburst of enthusiasm that actually changes us (although it often sets a direction). It is not the dramatic move that forms us into the image of our Master. Rather, it is the “small but always persistent discipline” that carves away the hard stone of our sinful passions and smooths our rough edges and undermines the foundation of our delusions about ourselves, about the world and about God. This is why St. Isaac tells us that patience, actually, is the evidence of God’s consolation received secretly, or in a hidden way, in our souls. Full Article
li Evangelism according to St. Isaac the Syrian By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:17:12+00:00 Too often we say that we love the sinner but hate the sin; however in practice, I don’t think the sinners can tell the difference. May God help us to care for the bodily needs and to lovingly honour our neighbours, especially those we disagree with, and let us strive in appropriate measure to be diligent in our life of prayer and in our ascetic disciplines so that even without a word we may influence our neighbour to turn from what is evil to what is beautiful. Full Article
li Deeds, Disposition, and Humility By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:22:00+00:00 When I can just be at peace with the fact that I am a mess, but that I am God’s mess (God’s beloved mess), then I don’t have to prove anything. Rather, I can just be my broken self. Full Article
li Reforestation and the Healing of the Soul By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:31:45+00:00 "Most of us most of the time will be attending to the first stage of the spiritual struggle: the purification of our senses through ascetic discipline, the control of the passions and developing the habit of attention. But even as we are focused mostly on this first stage, it does not mean that, by God’s Grace, we might not also have small clumps, small glimpses of illumination here and there growing in the field of our soul also. And who knows, maybe with time and continued struggle, deep in the heart of one of those little groves, in the darkest, most undisturbed part, who knows maybe the seedling of a great cedar is taking root." Full Article
li Concern Over God's Judgement: What Does It Look Like? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:35:08+00:00 Concern over God’s judgement has nothing to do with striving to be better. Concern over God’s judgement is to continually strive to enter God’s rest, to humble ourselves and feel sadness over our wretchedness, and to offer that wretchedness to God as prayer. This is what concern for God’s judgement looks like according to St. Isaac the Syrian. Full Article
li The Manuscript of Our Life By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2019-01-31T22:02:04+00:00 Fr. Michael Gillis shares from St. Isaac the Syrian (homily 62), in which St. Isaac offers us the metaphor of a manuscript in rough draft to help us understand why on-going repentance is important for Christians regardless of their real or imagined state of spiritual maturity. Full Article
li Rationalizing the Supra-rational By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2019-03-30T03:53:49+00:00 "The danger...is that any systemization of spiritual realities is both wrong and thus misleading. Systems, definitions and diagrams of the inner life are, in a sense, by definition wrong because they are an attempt to reduce to something that is merely rational that which transcends our rational capacity. The spiritual life is known and experienced, but because it is supra-rational, it cannot be spoken of in rational categories. Which does not mean that it cannot be spoken of at all. Irony, metaphor, and apophatic statements can sometimes point toward supra-rational, inner realities, or to what such realities are not. However, the word ‘sometimes’ is key." Full Article
li What Does Success in Bodily Warfare Look Like? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-07-23T15:19:39+00:00 Even as we strive to please God by disciplining ourselves and obeying His commands, we know that God loves us. We know that God will accept our striving for righteousness, even if we don’t do it very well, even if we fail. God is able to fix our mistakes. Therefore, like children striving to please a parent whom we know loves us completely, we offer what we have, what we can do, in a carefree way, knowing that 100% will never be enough to succeed completely all of the time, but it is enough to please God. Full Article
li Family Life and Spiritual Warfare By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2022-05-18T14:42:02+00:00 Fr. Michael Gillis answers the question of “how to overcome thoughts of pride in our hearts that inevitably come after labouring on good works for our families and people around us.” Full Article
li The Art of Humility By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-01-18T17:49:47+00:00 There is strength in humility. Full Article
li Philippians, Introduction By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-05-24T09:46:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young introduces the Epistle to the Philippians, before next week's dive into chapter 1. Full Article
li Philippians, Chapter 1 By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-05-31T15:59:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young discusses the first chapter of Philippians. Full Article
li Philippians Chapter 2 By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-07T13:40:00+00:00 Father Stephen De Young dives into St. Paul's Letter to the Philippians Chapter 2, verses 1-8. Full Article
li Philippians Chapter 2, Continued By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-14T14:26:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young continues the discussion on Philippians Chapter 2, verse 9. Full Article
li Philippians, Chapter 2, Conclusion By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-21T06:03:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young finishes the discussion of Philippians, Chapter 2. Full Article
li Philippians, Chapters 3 and 4 By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-28T06:02:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young concludes his discussion of the Epistle to the Philippians, by going through chapters 3 and 4. Full Article
li Jesus - The Light Of The World By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T13:59:58+00:00 One of the great "I Am" statements in Scripture is in John's Gospel where Jesus said, "I am the Light of the world" (John 8:12). Today Fr. Tom explores the word "light" and the significance of Christ's claim. Full Article
li Jesus - The Life By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T14:02:44+00:00 Fr. Thomas has explored Jesus as the Way, the Truth, and now, the Life. What does life mean and how is Christ identified as THE life? Full Article
li Jesus - The Bread of Life By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T14:03:13+00:00 Jesus didn't just say he would give us our daily bread; he said he is the Bread of Life. Fr. Tom Hopko continues his study of the great "I Am" sayings of Jesus. Full Article