do Homily for the Feast of the Circumcision of Christ in the Orthodox Church By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-01-02T18:25:15+00:00 If we want to share personally in Christ’s restoration and fulfillment of the human person in God’s image and likeness, we must cut off from our hearts and minds all that would separate us from embracing the great mystery of the One Who was circumcised in the flesh on the eighth day. Full Article
do We Will Either Take Up Our Crosses or Commit Idolatry By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-03-20T16:57:19+00:00 If we refuse to deny ourselves even in small ways this Lent, then we will become even more accustomed to serving ourselves instead of God and neighbor. Full Article
do Good Tenants of the Lord’s Vineyard Do Not Hoard the Fruit for Themselves By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-09-04T18:42:17+00:00 By faith in Christ, we have become the new tenants of the vineyard with an obligation to “give him the fruits in their seasons.” That, of course, is precisely what the original tenants refused to do. Instead of tending the vineyard and offering its fruit to their rightful owner, they wanted everything for themselves and even killed the son of the owner in order to take his inheritance. We must read this passage as a reminder that, in order to be good tenants of the Lord’s vineyard, we must offer ourselves in union with His great Self-Offering on the Cross for the salvation of the world. Full Article
do The Patient Obedience of Letting Down our Nets By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-09-25T19:26:42+00:00 Looking to the example of the great saints we commemorate today, as well as to the model of those holy fishermen, let us repudiate the superficial, self-centered tendencies celebrated by our culture and undertake the daily struggle of obedience to Christ. That means letting down our nets in obedience at every opportunity as we cry out for His merciful healing of our souls. That is the holy habit that we must all cultivate if we want to become worthy disciples of the Savior. Full Article
do We Must Learn to Mourn and Rejoice with the Widow of Nain By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-11-07T18:50:32+00:00 I am sure that many people today reject or have no interest in the Christian faith because they have not seen in others the healing of the human person brought by Jesus Christ. Perhaps they have heard Christians speaking primarily about morality, politics, emotion, or a view of salvation that has nothing to do with the realities of life in the world as we know it. Or they may have seen many examples of hypocrisy on the part of those who identify themselves with the Lord, but who live their lives in opposition to His teachings even as they look for opportunities to condemn their neighbors. Regardless, many today have concluded that there is nothing in the Christian life worthy of their devotion. Full Article
do Those Who Have Received Christ's Merciful Generosity Must "Go and Do Likewise" By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-12-04T06:00:01+00:00 It is terribly tragic when people fall into the delusion of thinking that they love God and neighbor, when in reality they are using religion to serve only themselves and the false gods of this world. One symptom of doing so is to narrow down the list of people who count as our neighbors to the point that we excuse ourselves from serving Christ in all who bear His image and likeness. When we do so, we disregard not only them, but our Lord Himself, the God-Man born for the salvation of all. Our actions then reveal that we are not truly united with Him because we seek to justify ourselves by serving nothing but our own vain imaginations. Full Article
do Homily for the Sunday of Forefathers (Ancestors) of Christ in the Orthodox Church By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-01-01T06:00:01+00:00 As we welcome Christ into our lives and world at His Nativity, we must remain focused. There is no shortage of distractions this time of year that appeal to our passions and threaten to convince us that there are matters more important than accepting His gracious invitation to enter fully into the joy of the banquet of the Kingdom of Heaven. The Savior calls us to embrace our true vocation not only during divine services or in the eschatological future, but in every moment of our lives. Full Article
do Are We Looking for a Kingdom Not Like the Other Nations? By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-01-15T06:00:01+00:00 As we conclude our preparation for celebrating the Lord’s Nativity, we must resist the temptation to corrupt this blessed season into an excuse for glorifying ourselves in any way. Instead, we must allow our hopes for whatever we want in this life to be called into question by the God-Man, Who was born in such strange circumstances to fulfill a kingdom not of this world that stands in prophetic judgment over all our agendas, preferences, and desires. We must learn at Christmas to hope only in Him. Full Article
do Homily for the Sunday Before the Theophany (Epiphany) of Christ in the Orthodox Church By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-01-22T06:00:01+00:00 Today is the Sunday before the Feast of Theophany (or Epiphany), when we celebrate Christ’s baptism in the river Jordan and the revelation that He is truly the Son of God. His divinity is made manifest and openly displayed at His baptism when the voice of the Father declares, “You are my beloved Son” and the Holy Spirit descends upon Him in the form of a dove. Theophany shows us that Jesus Christ, who was born in the flesh for our salvation at Christmas, is not merely a great religious teacher or moral example. He is truly God—a member of the Holy Trinity– and His salvation permeates His entire creation, including the water of the river Jordan. Through Christ’s and our baptism, we become participants in the holy mystery of our salvation, for He restores to us the robe of light which our first parents lost when they chose pride and self-centeredness over obedience and communion. He enters the Jordan to restore Adam and Eve, and all their children, to the dignity of those who bear the image and likeness of God. Full Article
do If We Do Not Invest Ourselves In the Life of the Kingdom, We Risk Losing Our Souls By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-02-27T00:55:06+00:00 It is easy to overlook how often the Lord used money and possessions to convey a spiritual message. Perhaps that is because almost everyone struggles with being overly attached to material things, for they can meet our basic physical needs and provide comfort and a sense of security. Due to our self-centered desires, however, they so easily become false gods as we make them the measure of our lives. As Christ taught, “Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also….You cannot serve both God and mammon.” (Matt. 6: 21, 24) Full Article
do Homily for the Sunday of Forgiveness in the Orthodox Church By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-03-26T12:25:37+00:00 On the last several Sundays, our gospel readings have challenged us to return home from our self-imposed exile. Zacchaeus gave more than justice required to the poor and those whom he had exploited from his ill-gotten gains, and was restored as a son of Abraham. By her persistence and humility, the Canaanite woman received the deliverance of her daughter as a sign that Christ calls all people to return home to Him in faith. The publican returned to his spiritual home by humbly calling for the Lord’s mercy, even as the Pharisee exiled himself by his pride. The prodigal son took the long journey home after coming to his senses about the misery of being in exile from the father whom he had abandoned. Full Article
do Homily for the First Sunday of Lent (The Sunday of Orthodoxy) By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-04-08T05:00:01+00:00 On this first Sunday of Great Lent, we commemorate the restoration of icons centuries ago in the Byzantine Empire. They were banned due to a misguided fear of idolatry, but restored as a proclamation of how Christ calls us to participate in His salvation in every dimension of our existence. Full Article
do The Adoration of the Holy Cross By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2024-04-15T17:08:51+00:00 We do not have to look very closely at dominant trends in our culture today for signs that many people are offering their lives for the service of false gods, regardless of how they identify themselves religiously. The evidence of their idolatry is not primarily in where they congregate to worship, but in how they seek first the things of this world, such as possessions, power, and pleasure, and in how they hate and condemn those whom they perceive to stand in the way of their acquiring them. Full Article
do The Post-Christian Christendom of Our Time By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T01:30:44+00:00 In part one of his introduction to his new podcast, Fr. John reflects on the crisis of Christian civilization in modern times. He also defines "Christendom" and explains why it is worthy of study. Full Article
do An Orthodox Perspective on the History of Christendom By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T01:31:13+00:00 In part two of his introduction to his new podcast, Fr. John offers a preview to the history of Christendom and describe the Orthodox perspective he plans to bring to it. Full Article
do The Origins of Christendom in the Cosmology of Christ's Great Commission By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T01:32:06+00:00 Fr. John discusses cosmology, a concept that was very important to the early Church. Full Article
do The Triumph of Orthodoxy and the Triumph of Christian Art By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T01:54:42+00:00 Fr. John explores the triumph of Orthodoxy in the year 843 and the way in which it enables the art of Christendom to express the deepest conviction about man's relationship with God and the possibility of communion with Him. Full Article
do Paradise in Early Christendom's Hymns of Lent and Pascha By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T01:58:46+00:00 Fr. John looks at some of the actual texts of early Christian hymns and the way in which they gave expression to the vision of early Christendom. Full Article
do Frankish Christendom and the Estrangement of East and West II By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T02:09:41+00:00 Fr. John looks at the development that took place within the Frankish lands themselves, especially those concerning the liturgy. Full Article
do Frankish Christendom and the Estrangement of East and West III By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T02:10:10+00:00 Fr. John examines the tendency toward eucharistic piety in Frankish Christendom. Full Article
do The Rise of Russian Christendom I By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-05-13T02:12:03+00:00 Fr. John discusses the baptism of Saint Vladimir and shares an introductory anecdote about the death and canonization of Saints Boris and Gleb. Full Article
do A New Christendom I By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-07-27T03:10:44+00:00 In this opening anecdote of a new reflection in the podcast, Fr. John examines a famous account of a medieval English knight's pilgrimage to Ireland and vision of purgatory there, relating how it documents the rise of a new type of piety in western Christendom. Full Article
do A New Christendom II By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-07-27T03:12:30+00:00 In this episode of his reflection on the new Christendom of the middle ages, Fr. John discusses the new ecclesiology of Roman Catholicism, contrasting it to Orthodoxy and concluding with a reference to its most notorious statement, the papal bull Unum Sanctum of Boniface VIII. Full Article
do A New Christendom III By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2014-08-29T03:06:25+00:00 In this episode, Fr. John describes the revolutionary changes that came to characterize western monasticism after the Great Schism, leading to the rise of the Franciscans, Dominicans, and Templars. Full Article
do The Rise of Russian Christendom II By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-03-05T21:02:35+00:00 Fr. John discusses the Christian statecraft of early Christian Russia. Full Article
do A New Christendom IV By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-03-20T18:03:30+00:00 In the latest episode of his reflection on the new Christendom of the medieval west, Fr. John discusses the new approach to theology fostered by scholasticism, contrasting it with traditional Christian theology. Full Article
do A New Christendom V By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-03-20T18:03:58+00:00 In his conclusion to this reflection, Fr. John discusses the Roman Catholic theological principle of "doctrinal development," and traces the origins of four new doctrines that arose in the west after the Great Schism. Full Article
do Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom I: Byzantium in the Shadow of the Muslim Turks By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-05-28T19:39:30+00:00 After a transition to his new parish assignment, Father John returns to the podcast with a discussion of the atmosphere of catastrophe that hung over the old Christendom of the east as the Muslim Turks advanced on Byzantium, while a defender of traditional Christianity, Saint Mark of Ephesus, prepared to depart for the unionist Council of Florence in the west. Full Article
do Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom II: Hesychasm By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-06-30T01:56:30+00:00 Fr. John introduces the force that kept traditional Christianity on course at a moment of crisis in the east, Hesychasm, and how it maintained Christendom's focus on paradise. Full Article
do Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom III: The Second Triumph of Orthodoxy By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-06-30T02:04:37+00:00 In this episode, Fr. John describes why Saint Gregory's defense of hesychasm against the westernized Barlaam represented a defense not only of Orthodoxy, but of Christendom itself. Full Article
do Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom IV By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-08-01T03:44:49+00:00 In this episode, Fr. John draws upon several scholarly works to show how hesychasm protected eastern Christendom from the forces that had begun to lead the new Christendom of the west away from traditional Christianity. Full Article
do Frankish Christendom and the Estrangement of East and West I By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-08-22T04:55:52+00:00 Fr. John discusses the rise of the Franks in Western Christianity. Full Article
do Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom V: Mark of Ephesus and the Council of Florence By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-09-06T03:50:54+00:00 Fr. John gives an account of the atmosphere in Italy in which Orthodox and Roman Catholic delegates met to discuss the possibility of union in the middle of the fifteenth century. Only one of the Orthodox would refuse to sign the resulting Treaty of Union, Saint Mark of Ephesus. Full Article
do Continuity and Catastrophe in the Old Christendom VI: The Muslim Conquest of Constantinople By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-09-12T16:05:17+00:00 In this final episode of Reflection 17, Fr. John relates the final catastrophe to befall eastern Christendom during the period, the fall of Constantinople to the Turks in 1453. Full Article
do The Third Rome IV: Muscovite Russia and Western Christendom By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-10-21T01:20:16+00:00 In this episode, Fr. John discusses Muscovite Russia's encounter with the West in the face of Uniatism, military invasion, and theological "captivity," all of which contributed to the decline of eastern Christendom. Full Article
do The Old Believer Schism and the Decline of Russian Christendom before Peter the Great By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2015-11-08T03:43:39+00:00 In this final episode of his reflection on Muscovite Russia, Fr. John describes the Old Believer Schism as a crisis in the formerly optimistic cosmology of eastern Christendom, leading to its decline on the eve of modern times. Full Article
do The Crisis of Western Christendom II: The Hypertrophic Papacy By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-07-06T01:52:16+00:00 In this episode, Fr. John discusses ways in which papal supremacy led to the growing sense of crisis that preceded the Protestant Reformation. Full Article
do The Crisis of Western Christendom: The Curse of Anthropological Pessimism By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-08-30T05:38:10+00:00 In this latest episode on the impending Protestant Reformation, Fr. John discusses ways in which the long legacy of pessimism about the human condition and the world in general undermined western Christendom at one of her most critical moments. Full Article
do The Crisis of Western Christendom IV: New Directions in Western Soteriology By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-10-17T01:23:52+00:00 In this episode, Father John continues his discussion of developments that led to the Protestant Reformation, emphasizing doctrines and practices related to human salvation. Full Article
do The Crisis of Western Christendom V: The Protestant “Resolution” By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2016-12-15T04:45:48+00:00 In this episode Father John concludes his reflection on the critical state of western Christendom on the eve of modern times, exploring how the Reformation tried to resolve the issue of anthropological pessimism but ironically served to intensify it. Full Article
do Frankish Christendom and the Estrangement of East and West IV By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2018-12-23T22:20:59+00:00 Fr. John concludes his account of the influence of the Franks by returning to the question of the filioque and how the papacy's resistance to its insertion in the Creed finally came to an end on the eve of the Great Schism. Full Article
do The Fall of Paradise II: The Reformation of Western Christendom By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2019-06-17T02:07:28+00:00 In this episode Father John describes some of the most noteworthy effects of the Protestant Reformation on Western Christendom, emphasizing the decline of a sacramental basis for civilization and the rise of a primarily moral one. Full Article
do The Crisis of Western Christendom I: Martin Luther's Reformation Breakthrough By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2019-10-17T19:33:54+00:00 Returning after a long absence from the podcast, Fr. John in this episode introduces a new reflection on the crisis of western Christendom prior to the Reformation by discussing the penitential context of Martin Luther's famous Ninety-Five Theses. Full Article
do Summit of Orthodox Iconography By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-06-08T20:07:09+00:00 In this, the first episode of the Paradise and Utopia video edition, Father John provides a video lecture from his office in Puget Sound, showing, with the use of powerful, full-color icons such as those of Andrei Rublev, how hesychasm inspired some of the greatest art in the history of eastern Christendom. Full Article
do When Christendom Was Born Again I: The Roman Revolution of Cola di Rienzo By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-09-24T15:50:51+00:00 In this anecdotal introduction to Reflection 21, Father John relates a remarkable but short-lived revolution in fourteenth-century Rome that served as a sign of what the age of utopia would bring. Listeners who enjoy the music of Richard Wagner will recognize the ill-fated revolutionary's name and understand why the turbulent nineteenth-century composer was attracted to him! And speaking of music, if you are wondering about the new closing sequence, it is a chorus from Mozart's utopian opera The Magic Flute and consists of the following (in translation): "When virtue and justice strew with fame the path of the great, then earth is a realm of heaven, and mortals are like the gods." Full Article
do When Christendom Was Born Again II: Petrarch's Despair By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-09-24T15:51:06+00:00 In this episode the "father of humanism," Francesco Petrarch, broods over his sense of guilt and despair, seeking a new path for Western Christendom known as the saeculum, or "secular." Full Article
do When Christendom Was Born Again III: The Origins of the Saeculum By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-09-24T15:51:18+00:00 Modern historians often bring attention to the effects of secularization on the West. Once traditional Christianity ceased to influence Western culture, the experience of the kingdom of heaven naturally diminished, something the famous German sociologist Max Weber called the "disenchantment of the world." In this episode, Fr. John describes how the concept of the saeculum, a kind of neutral cultural space cut off from the life of the Church, first appeared, and how, with Petrarch, it became a haven for humanists fleeing the pessimism of the fourteenth century. Full Article
do When Christendom Was Born Again IV: Petrarch contra Pope Innocent By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-09-24T15:51:30+00:00 In this episode, Father John relates a case in which the early humanist Petrarch confronted one of the new Christendom's chief architects, Pope Innocent III. Applying his newly developed secular thinking, he rejected the pope's notorious treatise entitled On the Misery of the Human Condition. Full Article
do When Christendom Was Born Again V: From Adam to Prometheus By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2021-09-24T15:51:41+00:00 In this episode, Fr. John Strickland recounts the efforts of three Italian humanists of the quattrocento ("fourteen hundreds") to rescue the dignity of man from the pessimism of Western culture. Departing from traditional Christianity's dignification of man through communion with God, they looked instead to Neoplatonism and there found a model of the fully autonomous human being, Prometheus. Full Article
do Solving Post-Christian Christendom's Transcendence Problem I: The Architects of Liberal Ideology By www.ancientfaith.com Published On :: 2023-02-24T18:52:09+00:00 In this long-delayed episode (due to work on The Age of Nihilism, available at store.ancientfaith.com/the-age-of-nihilism-christendom-from-the-great-war-to-the-culture-wars), Father John presents the historical origins of liberalism as a modern secular ideology. Atheistic philosophers like Auguste Comte and John Stuart Mill provided the philosophical basis for hope in a secular "kingdom of posterity." Full Article