THE SUNDAY OF THE TRIUMPH OF ORTHODOXY

Patristic theology, and traditional teachings of Orthodoxy from the Church fathers of apostolic times to the present. All forum Rules apply. No polemics. No heated discussions. No name-calling.


Ekaterina
Protoposter
Posts: 1847
Joined: Tue 1 February 2005 8:48 am
Location: New York

THE SUNDAY OF THE TRIUMPH OF ORTHODOXY

Post by Ekaterina »

Dear brethren, we have embarked upon the spiritual endeavor of the Great Lent, and now – on the first Sunday of Lent – we celebrate a special event: the Triumph of Orthodoxy.

What does the triumph of Orthodoxy mean? On a historical plane this celebration was initiated during the reign of the Greek Empress Theodora in 842 A.D. to commemorate the overcoming of the heresy of iconoclasm and the restoration of icon worship. But even earlier there was the following historical moment: in 303 A.D. the Roman Emperor Diocletian began a most cruel and terrifying persecution of Christians. He issued an edict to destroy all the Bibles in the world and to kill all Christians. The persecution of Christians was so merciless that a year later the iniquitous persecutors decided that they had already accomplished their objective and had erased Christianity from the face of the earth. Diocletian even erected an obelisk with the following inscription: “The name of Christian has been destroyed forever!”

At that time Christians were drowning in blood, burning in bonfires, tortured, suffering, dying, – and Diocletian’s boast had all the appearance of reality. But who came after Diocletian? Emperor Constantine the Great, who called himself a Christian and who established Christianity as the official state religion. He removed pagan symbols from the standards of the Roman army and the soldiers’ shields, and ordered them to be replaced with the symbol of Christianity – the Lord’s Cross. What a miraculous transformation took place in that year of 312 A.D. – just nine years after Diocletian erected his famous obelisk of stupidity!

But these are just historical events. And what does the triumph of Orthodoxy mean in our days, when the persecution of true Christians – true Orthodox Christians – proceeds in a manner no less cruel and merciless than in Diocletian’s times, albeit not always so openly, but more often in cunning ways? We should ponder this more attentively.

First of all, when we are asked: what is our religion? – we promptly reply that we are Orthodox Christians. But what do we exactly mean by that? We must always remember that Orthodoxy is not simply a religion on paper, a box to be checked or a name to be written on a dotted line, – but it is a way of life. When we come to be baptized, we are asked very important questions: first – do we reject Satan? and second – do we unite ourselves with Christ? The answer to both these questions must be affirmative, otherwise the priest cannot continue with the sacrament of baptism. Therefore, we must always especially remember that we – Orthodox Christians – have become united with Christ. This means that we must live fully in accordance with the commandments of the Lord Jesus Christ, our Saviour.

And we must always remember that Orthodoxy differs greatly from all other religions. Lutherans, Baptists, Methodists and others – all seem to be Christians, and yet they have fallen away from the truth of Christ’s Church, while Buddhists, Moslems, Hindus, etc. do not recognize the Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, at all. But we should not judge them, for they will be judged by Christ Himself.

In His Gospel the Lord said to His apostles: go forth and preach My Gospel to all, and baptize people in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit; and whoever accepts My baptism shall be saved, while those who reject it shall perish.

And so all of us here have embraced the sacrament of baptism, dear brethren, and it means that we have accepted all the commandments of our Saviour: it means that we will love one another and our enemies, we will keep all the fasts, we will remain in constant prayer to the Lord, and thus we will fulfill the law of Christ. And that is what the Triumph of Orthodoxy means. For almost two thousand years Orthodoxy triumphs in that people become baptized and unite with Christ, live by Christ’s commandments, instill the Orthodox faith into their lives and – most importantly – make Orthodoxy their way of life.

Let us be among such people, dear brethren! Let us live with Christ, in accordance with His commandments; let us make use of this precious time of the Great Lent to purify ourselves in order to unite with Christ, and in this way we, too, will take part in the Triumph of Orthodoxy, we, too, will add our small share to this triumph. And then not only over the Church of Christ, but even over ourselves the gates of hell will never be able to prevail. Amen.

Father Rostislav Sheniloff

CHRISTIAN 1
Newbie
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue 26 April 2005 3:01 am
Location: CALIFORNIA

Post by CHRISTIAN 1 »

I also agree that we must live in full compliance with the commandments of our Lord Jesus Christ. This is what shows our loyalty to God and not to the world. Following all ten of them is very important to our Father. It is a shame that many christians want the ten commandments hung at court houses and schools, but only want to follow nine of them. Don't they remember how Matthew 5:18 says: For assuredly, I say to you, till heaven and earth pass away(meaning forever), one jot or one tittle will by no means pass from the law till all is fulfilled. God would never change the perfect law He created. The bible says, the Lord is perfect and unchanging. A perfect God would not create a perfect law asking to REMEMBER the 7th day sabbath, and then all of a sudden change his mind and not tell anyone. The 7th day sabbath has been followed from the time of Adam and Eve and throughout history by Gods faithful. God even says in Isaiah 66:22-23 that in the new heavan and earth, from one sabbath to the next, all flesh will worship Him.
Gods law is unchanging, as He is. I love the Lord and want to make Him happy. And Jesus says in the bible that if you love me, keep my commandment(s). I for one will keep our Heavanly Fathers commandments till the day I die, and am glad that you also have a conviction to keep the ten commandments. God bless.

OrthodoxyOrDeath

Post by OrthodoxyOrDeath »

Christian 1,

Welcome. I decided to answer you, but I don't expect to have the time until after Passover this Sunday to answer any more. Orthodox Christians are in a time of fasting right now as it is Great Lent, which is why we have purple colors on the forum; like it? :)

Anyway, to answer your question, Orthodox Christians do keep the Sabbath (Saturday). In fact, we sanctify every day of the week. Fasts are relaxed in celebration of the Sabbath. For Orthodox Christians, Sunday is the Lord's day, the day we worship the resurrected Lord. And before the Lord was resurrected, he "rested" in the Tomb on Saturday. You see, Christ in the Old Testament, who created the world, did not need to rest, so we see the commandment to keep the Sabbath as a prefiguring of the Lords rest in the Tomb on Saturday. And the Cross was the instrument of His rest on the Sabbath. We have liturgy on Saturday as well as Sunday – which may surprise you. On the Sabbath (Saturday) we remember those that “Sleep in Christ”. We pray for the dead but we do not stop there; We pray that they may partake in Christ’s holy resurrection on Sunday, which is far greater and much more important than the Saturday Sabbath. We celebrate the fullness of the mystery. The true end IS the resurrection (celebrated on Sunday)– so do not stop at death symbolized by the Lord’s resting on the Sabbath.

CHRISTIAN 1
Newbie
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue 26 April 2005 3:01 am
Location: CALIFORNIA

Post by CHRISTIAN 1 »

Yes, I do like the purple colors, they are very soothing. :D I do agree with you that you can and should worship the Lord every day of the week. You obviously love to serve the Lord, and I respect you for this.
As far as saying that sunday is more important though, I just can't find the scriptural evidence. Jesus speaks throughout the old and new testaments about the importance of his faithful, who keep the ten commandment sabbath. I think if Jesus transferred the solemnity of the saturday sabbath to sunday, He wouldn't have left it as a mystery. Just before Jesus comes in the clouds the bible speaks of the saints in revalation 14:12 saying here are they that keep the commandments of God, and the faith of Jesus. The saturday sabbath is definately an important part of the ten commandments, and God new people would forget. That is why He says "REMEMBER the sabbath" and also the "seventh day is the sabbath of the Lord thy God." In James 2:10, when speaking of Gods ten commandment law, it says "For whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become guilty of all of it. Honoring the seventh day sabbath above all other days is definately one point in Gods law. Honoring sunday above Gods sabbath, would be breaking Gods law. Jesus did not come to do away with the law, but to uphold it. If you change the saturday sabbath of the 4th commandment to sunday, it would seem to me that in gods eyes you might as well be breaking all 10 of them. I have searched the scriptures far and wide, as I wan't to please God. I have yet to find a scripture describing a major change to Gods perfect law, which would substitute sunday for saturday. Surely, such a major revelation(change) would at the very least be "mentioned" in the bible, or spoken of by the prophets at least once. If you change the seventh day sabbath, you have to throw out all ten of the commandments. If there were no commandments we would not know what sin was. If we didn't know what sin was, than nobodey would be sinning, and there would have been no reason for Jesus to die for our sin. Surely we must not do away with the commandments of God. I think everyone would agree that we shouldn't kill each other. We still need the ten commandments in the world today. Sure, some might say I'm dwelling on the law and not focusing on Christ Jesus. I'm just trying to make the Lord happy, and Jesus says " if you love me keep my commandments."

User avatar
尼古拉前执事
Archon
Posts: 5127
Joined: Thu 24 October 2002 7:01 pm
Faith: Eastern Orthodox
Jurisdiction: Non-Phylitist
Location: United States of America
Contact:

Post by 尼古拉前执事 »

This is detailed in the Acts of the Apostles, how they had their Divine Liturgies on the 8th day.

CHRISTIAN 1
Newbie
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue 26 April 2005 3:01 am
Location: CALIFORNIA

Post by CHRISTIAN 1 »

Thanks for the responses! :D It is interesting to see how other people interpret the bible. Hope you guys had a great weekend!
God Bless!

Joseph
Member
Posts: 114
Joined: Sat 5 February 2005 11:58 am
Location: TN

Post by Joseph »

Christan I

I would be interested to learn where in the Bible it is taught that everything the Church believes and teaches is found and interpreted in the Bible. Where does the Bible tell us that the Bible is the only source for the Christian Faith? Are you saying that whatever you cannot find in the Bible, you don't believe?

Post Reply