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Theophany Brings New Life and Communion

The dynamis of Theophany is towards new life and communion. We see this in the community, as God is bringing healing to Jacob, while also opposing the flattening (or "alienation of the spirit") that so often happens in modern culture.




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Scenes from Everyday Life at the Mission

Brother Luke reflects on some scenes from every day at the mission.




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Reflections on Holy Week in the Community

Brother Luke reflects on Holy Week experiences in the community.




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6.9.24 Our Hope of Restoration

Father Nicolae writes about how both the blind man in the Gospel reading, and Angela (a member of the community) have been changed by Christ to such an extent that they are nearly unrecognizable. This gives all of us hope of restoration through Christ.




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6.23.24 Communion Inspires Unity

Through Matthew's arrival at the community this week, we learn that communion makes us look for the one that is lost: Through the wounds of the poor, Christ pours out His grace.




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7.13.24 Angels, Flowers, and the Light of the Resurrection

Father Nicolai reflects on recent hopeful learnings in the community.




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Some New Stories from the Mission

Brother Luke shares some new stories from the mission.




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10.5.24 In Search of Resurrection

A discussion of Saturday's gospel leads community members to search for Resurrection.




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Introduction

Introductory show




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Transition

Martha reflects back on a summer full of difficult transitions.




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Reflections

Martha shares some culinary and spiritual insights as she reflects back upon 2009.




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Building Relationships Around Food

Martha looks back on 2011, remembering the many relationships she built through food.




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Food Temptations

Being grouchy and irritable from hunger is not the only food-related sin to avoid during Great Lent.




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TechDirt’s Mike Masnick on the Internet Archive decision

the ruling is "a knife in the back of libraries," claiming that authors won't write new books if libraries lend digital books for free #




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DOOM in the iOS Photos app

a technically-playable (but just barely) hack using iOS Shortcuts to download remote screenshots compiled into videos #




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Aftermath’s list of discussion forums

Chris Person compiled a list of active forums, grouped by subject area, hosted outside of the major platforms #




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Boing Boing launches ad-free paid version on Substack, shuttering discussion forums

the BBS goes read-only on Friday, replaced by Substack comments, and the community is not happy #




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Moida Mansion

Papers Please/Obra Dinn creator Lucas Pope dropped a surprise spooky free web game inspired by 1980s LCD handhelds #




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NYT Tech Guild goes on strike the day before U.S. election

they're asking people not to access NYT games or cooking apps until it's over, so give up that Wordle streak #




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For the first time, every incumbent party in 10 major countries lost their elections this year

inflation was a painful global phenomenon, and every ruling party was punished for it regardless of political leanings #




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The Genesis Creation Stories




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A Tame Lion




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Chieti, Reunion, and the Rush to Embrace




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Annunciation




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The Trisagion Hymn

In the original usage, the Trisagion was sung as a refrain to Psalm 80. The cantor would chant verses of the psalm as all walked in procession and the people sung the Trisagion hymn as its refrain after every verse.




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Three Liturgical Questions

I sometimes cannot help asking myself three liturgical questions whenever I visit churches which serve the Liturgy in the “classic” pattern I learned in seminary—all of those questions quite rhetorical.




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Not Like Religion – the Christian Clergy

It is easy to misinterpret Christianity as a religion like any other but Fr. Lawrence maintains it is unique.




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Not Like Religion – Clean vs. Unclean

Fr. Lawrence continues his series and examines the correlation in the Scriptures between that which is clean and that which is unclean.




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Not Like Religion – Sacred Space

We Christians share certain external similarities with the religions, but these external similarities can mask the inner meanings of the things we seem to share. In reality, everything in Christianity is different from the religions.




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Scriptural Teaching On Predestination




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Songs of Light and Revelation




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Reflections on the Septuagint




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Christian Zionism




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Biblical Exegesis and Confessionalism




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Comfort in Affliction




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Lord's Prayer - Introduction




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Dormition-what actually happened




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The Beatitudes - An Introduction




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Holy Tradition




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Dormition - What Actually Happened?




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Traditional family values




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Adoption to Sonship

In the baptismal prayer in which the priest blesses the baptismal water, there is a line that baptism will bestow upon the candidate the loosing of bonds, the remission of sins, the illumination of the soul and “the gift of adoption to sonship”. The phrase “adoption of sonship” is a reference to the words of St. Paul, who used the word to describe our salvation in Christ in Ephesians 1:5. There he sums up our salvation by saying that God “predestined us to adoption to sonship [Greek υίοθεσία/ uiothesia] through Jesus Christ to Himself”. Given that this adoption to sonship serves to encapsulate and summarize our entire salvation, we must pay it closer attention and to what it all means.




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Reflections on an October Event

Everyone presumably acknowledges that there is nothing wrong with children dressing up as fairies, Disney characters, Marvel superheroes, and (my own favourite when I was a child) black cats in order to go door to door with their friends after dark to collect candy. The argument against Halloween is that it also glorifies violence, gore, and death, so that it is unsuitable for Christians to participate in Halloween. Collecting candy is fine; it is the frightening stuff that comes afterward that is the problem. Halloween trades in things like graveyards and corpses and ugly witches on broomsticks and bats and cobwebs and Frankenstein monsters. So, the question arises: why do people delight in such scary stuff?




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The Strange and Perverse Disinclination to Believe in a Miracle

G. K. Chesterton wrote that he once left fairy tales lying on the floor of the nursery and hadn’t found any books so sensible since (from his Orthodoxy, “The Ethics of Elfland”). I suggest that Christianity is one such fairy tale, and also that it is a myth. But it is a fairy tale come true, and a myth that became a fact.




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Jesus Revolution

I sometimes tell inquirers at St. Herman’s when they ask that I began my Christian life in earnest as a Jesus People—which usually results in blank stares, since most of them are too young to have heard of the cultural phenomenon known as the Jesus People Movement. The movement has recently come up again for notice in a film called “Jesus Revolution”, based on the true events of the founding of Calvary Chapel in California under Pastor Chuck Smith (d. 2013) and his long-haired hippie protégé Lonnie Frisbee. The film, a well done and positive presentation of the events, stars Kelsey Grammer and features the role of Greg Laurie (played by Joel Courtney) as a new convert to Christ at Smith’s Calvary Chapel, and as someone who would go on to found Harvest Christian Fellowship Church, with campuses in California and Hawaii. Harvest Ministries is the group which released the film.




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An Offensive Invitation?

I am told on good authority that it is offensive to invite people of other religions to convert to Christianity. Thus it is offensive to say to a Jew, “Jesus is the Messiah and the Son of God and so you should be baptized and become a Christian”. It is similarly offensive to say to a Muslim, “Jesus is the divine Son of God and Muhammad was not a true prophet, nor is Qur’an His Word, and so you should be baptized and become a Christian”. It is also offensive to say to a Hindu, “Those whom you worship as Gods such as Vishnu, Shiva, and Krishna are not true Gods, but idols, and so you should be baptized and become a Christian”.




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Pope Francis’ "Fiducia Supplicans" and Same-Sex Union

I have just read two fascinating pieces about Pope Francis’ recent and controversial document Fiducia Supplicans, which officially allows Roman Catholic priests to bless persons in same-sex relationships, one by an Orthodox and the other by a Roman Catholic.




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Menstruation and Holy Communion

I remember once when a friend was sharing with me his distress at the liberalism afflicting his Protestant denomination, and the fact that many of their clergy were denying such things as the virgin birth and the divinity of Christ. While murmuring sympathetically, I mentioned that such denials were not the same problem in the Orthodox Church. He then asked me what sort of things we did argue about. When I replied, “Well, things like whether or not a woman can receive Holy Communion while she is menstruating,” he looked at me funny. He didn’t ask, “What planet are you guys on?” but I could tell he was thinking it. Loudly.




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Finding Comfort in the Ascension

The feast of the Ascension is a feast of comfort and consolation for the people of God. But it can for some people represent a stumbling block. Looking at the ascension of Christ as it is narrated in Scriptures, does the Church then really believe that accepting the Ascension also involves accepting a literal three-storey universe?




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Marian Devotion, Orthodox and Roman Catholic

Protestant critics of Orthodoxy fault us for many things, but one of the foremost of their objections is our devotion to Mary, the Mother of Jesus. Hostility to Roman Catholicism is built into Protestant DNA, so anything in Orthodoxy that resembles something in Roman Catholicism will be subject to criticism, including such more or less innocuous things like clergy wearing cassocks and calling themselves “Father”. Our Orthodox devotion to Mary (whom we call “the Theotokos”) often heads the list of Protestant objections, since it features so prominently in Roman Catholicism.