of Prayers of Holy Communion By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-18T01:32:58+00:00 Elissa explains how to use images from existing pre-communion prayers to help children prepare themselves for the Holy Mysteries. Full Article
of Prayer Groups: the Psalter and the Blessings of Intercession By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-18T02:17:31+00:00 Elissa describes the "Psalter group" and its purpose during Great Lent. Full Article
of The Triumph of Orthodoxy: Icons in the Church! By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-18T02:18:21+00:00 The Sunday of Orthodoxy offers us an opportunity to discuss with our kids the Orthodox understanding of the materiality of this world and its potential for holiness. Full Article
of Traditions of Holy Week and Pascha By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-18T02:20:47+00:00 Elissa shares some of the youth-centric traditions of her home parish with regard to Holy Week and Pascha. Full Article
of The Light of Pascha By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-18T02:21:17+00:00 Elissa reminds us that we are temples of God, meant to light up and become a lamp for the world. Full Article
of Nativity and the Solidarity of Mankind By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-12-01T17:33:43+00:00 Why does it matter that our God came down to earth and took on flesh? Elissa discusses using the Jesse Tree and other means to teach our children about the Feast of the Nativity. Full Article
of The True Meaning of Christmas By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-12-31T06:11:04+00:00 Gifts are a part of Christmas, and that's actually okay, but "God become flesh" is the true meaning of Christmas. Full Article
of Great Lent: A Season of Increase and Decrease By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-03-02T19:29:26+00:00 The goal of Great Lent is not only to deny ourselves and live for Christ, but also to let Christ live in us. Full Article
of The End of Days: Holy Pascha By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-04-02T23:51:18+00:00 Great Lent is a preparation for the ultimate Pascha—for the end of time and Christ's return. Full Article
of Tongues of Fire: Teaching the Holy Spirit By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-09T14:44:42+00:00 The Holy Spirit can be a difficult and abstract concept to explain to young people, so in honor of the feast of Pentecost, Elissa explores the story of the tongues of fire, as well as the prayer "O Heavenly King," to find ways to describe this most mysterious person of the Holy Trinity. Full Article
of Song of the Vineyard By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-29T02:31:59+00:00 Fr. Michael shares the song of the vineyard, from the Prophet Isaiah. Full Article
of Shedding the Fear of God's Wrath By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-29T02:33:30+00:00 Fr. Michael discusses fear of, and love for, God. Full Article
of 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
of 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
of 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
of 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
of 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
of 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
of 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
of Two Kinds of Confidence By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:21:33+00:00 "In Homily 27, St. Isaac the Syrian speaks of two kinds of confidence. The first kind of confidence is what we generally mean when we say someone is confident. That is, the person is sure about what he or she is doing or saying. St. Isaac tells us that this kind of confidence is spiritually dangerous. It is dangerous because we live in an age of changeability, or 'ununiformity' as it is translated in the Holy Transfiguration edition of St. Isaac’s text. This ununiformity refers to the mutability or inconstancy we experience in this world. Things and people don't stay the same." Full Article
of Of Course There Are Many Inconsistencies By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:34:24+00:00 In one of his talks, St. Theophan speaks of the glories of life in a monastery and then he makes a the following statement: “Of course, many inconsistencies occur here, too…” Ah, there’s the rub. There’s the bit that throws us off, “many inconsistencies occur here, too.” And the saint says, “of course,” as though we should have never expected things to be consistent. But we do. We do expect things to be consistent and we are offended when they are not. Full Article
of Learning the Prayer of the Heart By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-02T04:59:16+00:00 In 1851, an anonymous monk on Mount Athos wrote a book on prayer. The title of the book has been translated as The Watchful Mind: Teachings on the Prayer of the Heart. It is a book that I cannot recommend for most people because, like much classic Orthodox spiritual writing (the Philokalia, The Ladder of Divine Ascent, The Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian, to name a few), it was written for people pursuing the spiritual life, a life in communion with God, in a very specific monastic setting, a setting that exists in very few places in the world today, or some might say—indeed have said—in a setting that does not exist at all in the world any more. And yet, these texts are nonetheless compelling for us because they bear witness to a relationship with God, an intensity of relationship with God, that many people in the world today long for. Full Article
of 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
of 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
of Knowledge As The Infancy Of Love By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-03T04:57:40+00:00 Fr. Michael shares from Homily 47 of St. Isaac the Syrian. "Knowledge is not something to be held in contrast to love; but rather, knowledge is the beginning of a process or journey that leads to love. Knowledge is the infancy of love. And just as a July apple is hard and green and bitter, so knowledge when its growth into love has been hindered, only makes us proud (pride being the spiritual equivalent of the upset tummy that comes from eating green apples). But when knowledge has matured, St. Isaac tells us, it ‘surmounts’ even what is natural to attain to love." Full Article
of 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
of On the Motions of Our Souls By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:27:05+00:00 A very wise nun once said something like this: “If you have an evil thought, dismiss it; but if you can’t dismiss it, don’t dwell on it; but if you can’t stop dwelling on it, don’t speak it; but if you can’t keep from speaking it, don’t act on it; but if you can’t keep from acting on it, don’t do it again; but if you do do it again; seek help to find repentance.” The point she was making was this: salvation starts where you are. Full Article
of 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
of Being of One Mind: What It Is and Isn't By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-04T04:38:31+00:00 "As Christians we are all called to be of one mind, but that one mind is not your mind or my mind or somebody else’s—no matter how holy or important that person is or how much authority he or she has. The one mind we are called to have is Christ’s." Full Article
of The Least of These By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2017-06-02T20:55:28+00:00 "In our awkward attempts to love the needy, we discover our own poverty. They may hunger for bread, but we hunger for righteousness. In clothing the naked, we see our own nakedness, our complete lack of virtue. In visiting the prisoner or the sick we discover that we are imprisoned by habits of prideful and judgemental thought; we are sick with selfish passions and desires. When we do the outer work that Jesus speaks of, we discover the inner meaning that Jesus is referring to." Here is the article that Fr. Michael refers to: http://blogs.ancientfaith.com/prayingintherain/2015/10/your-kingdom-come-the-sorting-parables/. Full Article
of 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
of Behold the Goodness and Severity of God By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2019-03-31T02:59:41+00:00 And those who are outside the Orthodox Church, even those outside any kind of Christian faith whatsoever, what about these? Could these be the poor, the blind and the lame of today? As the Gentiles were outside the ancient covenant with Abraham, yet were invited, even compelled into the Kingdom of the Messiah because of the unbelief of many of the Jews, will we Christians be spared if we do not ourselves put on Christ? Is it possible that those not so nearly blessed as we are, those blind to the Creed, poor without the Divine Liturgy, and lame in regard to faith, will not these, perhaps, be the ones compelled into the Kingdom of Heaven while those of us with every blessing, yet distracted by every worldly concern, are left outside? St. Paul tells us to consider both the goodness and the severity of God. Full Article
of The Feast of Mid-Pentecost By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-03-07T17:27:46+00:00 For all that Christ accomplished for our salvation at Pascha, it remains still for us to receive it. And for us to receive the resurrected Life, we have to thirst for it. All of the blessings and gifts and graces of heaven are ours through Christ, but God will not force them on us. God will only give us the heavenly gifts if we thirst for them. Full Article
of The Juice of our Soul By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-03-07T18:22:03+00:00 I have found that it is usually better for me to say nothing at the beginning, at the moment I feel like saying something. At that moment, it is usually best not to say anything because if I say something the very moment I feel like saying it, the juice is not sweet. It’s sour. And no matter how true or right what I have to say is, all the hearer notices is the sour, bitter, angry or judgemental note hidden in my words. Full Article
of The Mark of the Beast By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-05T14:08:17+00:00 It seems whenever there is a crisis, people begin to see possible predictions and warnings about such times in the scripture. And certainly Christ does warn us to be prepared for the End, and to recognize that various tribulations and “wars and rumours of wars” would be the ongoing signs that the End is near. However, the scriptures themselves also tell us that we are already in the Last Days. That is, from the time of the Apostles we have been in the “last hour,” and already “many antichrists have come” (1John 2: 18). For just as the Kingdom of Heaven is near (at hand) at all times, so too, the End is always near. Full Article
of The Two Saints Pelagia of Antioch By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-05T15:23:17+00:00 On October 8, we commemorate two Sts. Pelagia of Antioch. The first is a virgin martyr, and the second is a repentant harlot, sometimes referred to as St. Pelagia the former courtesan of Antioch. Full Article
of Breaking the Cycle of Sin and Pain By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-07-23T15:31:40+00:00 Last night I attended a prayer service in the street in front of the Coptic Orthodox Church that was burned down early Monday morning. Although some evidence points toward arson, arson has not been proven and no motive has yet been identified. However, there has been a recent spike in violence against churches (vandalism, arson and threats), some sources report over 200 significant incidents in Canada since June. Many of us may be wondering what we should do. Well, I think we should do what our Coptic Orthodox brothers and sisters are doing. We should pray and love. Full Article
of The Wrath of God According to St. John Chrysostom By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-08-31T21:13:39+00:00 All suffering, however, regardless of its apparent immediate source, can be understood as the wrath of God. But we must never forget that we call it God’s wrath because of how we feel and how we experience it, not because God is at all angry or vengeful. Rather, God both allows and brings about suffering in our lives as a doctor treating a patient. What patient after major surgery has not experienced the wrath of the physical therapist? Healing the body is often painful. Full Article
of Hiding in the Midst of Strife By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-09-10T22:55:48+00:00 I write a weekly letter for our community and this week I thought I would share this letter with a broader audience. We celebrated the Feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos this week. Mary the Mother of God was born into a world full of oppression and confusion, yet she was able to become the Holy dwelling place of God. We too, especially at this time of government restrictions and all of the heightened rhetoric of political campaigns—all too radicalized and spun by social media, news outlets, social prophets, and advertising—we too may feel that we are living in an increasingly oppressive and confusing world. While we are not suffering under the occupation of a foreign army, as was Israel during the lifetime of the Mother of God, still many of us are angry and stressed out by the restrictions being imposed on us, whether we agree with them or not. Full Article
of Love in a World of Uncertainty By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-10-05T01:15:57+00:00 Today we live in a time of uncertainty; but really, today is no more uncertain than yesterday nor the day or year or century before. Certainty is a kind of delusion. It is a delusion that conveniently forgets that there is much, much more going on in the world than we know and can see. How, then, can we live in peace when our life is enveloped in uncertainty? How do we escape the fear of uncertainty? Full Article
of The Interactive Work Of The Holy Spirit By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2022-06-08T13:54:56+00:00 The work of the Holy Spirit in our lives always takes place on two levels, both on the level of what is outside us or what comes to us, and on the level of what is within us or how we receive what comes to us. Full Article
of The Art of Humility By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-01-18T17:49:47+00:00 There is strength in humility. Full Article
of Death Does Not Come for Coffee By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-02-09T06:00:01+00:00 What will we finally say when death visits us - and not for coffee? Full Article
of Four Sources of Thoughts By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-10-04T05:00:01+00:00 The movement of thoughts in a man originates from four causes. Full Article
of The Form of Love By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-10-18T05:00:01+00:00 "The grace of God is not in the man who does not love his enemies." Full Article
of Introduction to the Acts of the Apostles By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2018-10-01T15:53:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young kicks off the study of the Acts of the Apostles with background information. Full Article
of Overview of the General Epistles By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2022-06-13T11:16:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young gives an overview of the General Epistles of the New Testament. Full Article
of Overview of the Epistle of St. James By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2022-06-20T11:25:00+00:00 Fr. Stephen De Young gives an overview of the Epistle of St. James. Full Article
of Jesus - The Lamb of God By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T13:56:00+00:00 God commanded Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac on the altar. Fr. Tom explores this passage and others that refer to Jesus as "the Lamb." Full Article
of Jesus - The Servant of the Lord By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T13:56:24+00:00 Listen to a fascinating and instructive word study on the word "servant" and how it is applied to Jesus in both the Old and New Testaments. Full Article