Calendar of Upcoming Events

    • Vesperal Div. Liturgy, 5pm
    • Great Vespers, 5pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Great Vespers, 5pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Great Vespers, 5pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Divine Liturgy, 10:00am
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 8pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 8:30am
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Great Vespers, 5pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Great Compline, 6pm
    • Presanctified Liturgy, 5:00pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 8:30am
    • Great Vespers, 5pm
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Orthros for Holy Monday, 7pm
    • Orthros for Holy Tuesday, 7pm
    • Orthros for Holy Wednesday, 7pm
    • Divine Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts, 9am
    • Mystery of Holy Oil, 3:45pm
    • Orthros for Holy Thursday, 7pm
    • Vesperal Divine Liturgy, 7am
    • The Fearful and Saving Passion of our Lord, 7pm
    • Royal and Great Hours, 9am
    • Vespers of Unnailing, 3pm
    • Orthros for Holy Saturday (Lamentations), 7pm
    • Vesperal Divine Liturgy: First Resurrection with His Grace Bishop Demetrios of Mokisson, 9am
    • The Vigil for Holy and Great Pascha, 11:30pm
    • Vespers of Agape, 3pm
    • Bright Monday, Divine Liturgy, 9:30am
    • Bright Wednesday, Divine Liturgy, 9:30am
    • The Life-giving Spring, Divine Liturgy, 9:30am
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Orthros / Div. Liturgy, 9am
    • Great Vespers, 5pm
    • Great Vespers, 5pm

Entries in fasting (9)

Saturday
Aug212010

Elder Arsenios Papacioc: About True Fasting

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XII: On the Fast of the Tenth Month I  

I. Restoration to the Divine Image in Which We Were Made is Only Possible by Our Imitation of God’s Will
If, dearly beloved, we comprehend faithfully and wisely the beginning of our creation, we shall find that man was made in God’s image, to the end that he might imitate his Creator, and that our race attains its highest natural dignity, by the form of the Divine goodness being reflected in us, as in a mirror. And assuredly to this form the Saviour’s grace is daily restoring us, so long as that which, in the first Adam fell, is raised up again in the second. And the cause of our restoration is naught else but the mercy of God, Whom we should not have loved, unless He had first loved us, and dispelled the darkness of our ignorance by the light of His truth.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XL: On Lent II

I. Progress and Improvement Always Possible
Although, dearly-beloved, as the Easter festival approaches, the very recurrence of the season points out to us the Lenten fast, yet our words also must add their exhortations which, the Lord helping us, may be not useless to the active nor irksome to the devout. For since the idea of these days demands the increase of all our religious performances, there is no one, I am sure, that does not feel glad at being incited to good works. For though our nature which, so long as we are mortal, will be changeable, is advancing to the highest pursuits of virtue, yet always has the possibility of filling back, so has it always the possibility of advancing. And this is the true justness of the perfect that they should never assume themselves to be perfect, lest flagging in the purpose of their yet unfinished journey, they should fall into the danger of failure, through giving up the desire for progress.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XLII: On Lent IV

I. The Lenten Fast an Opportunity for Restoring Our Purity
In proposing to preach this most holy and important fast to you, dearly beloved, how shall I begin more fitly than by quoting the words of the Apostle, in whom Christ Himself was speaking, and by reminding you of what we have read: “behold, now is the acceptable time, behold now is the day of salvation.” For though there are no seasons which are not full of Divine blessings, and though access is ever open to us to God’s mercy through His grace, yet now all men’s minds should be moved with greater zeal to spiritual progress, and animated by larger confidence, when the return of the day, on which we were redeemed, invites us to all the duties of godliness: that we may keep the super-excellent mystery of the Lord’s passion with bodies and hearts purified. These great mysteries do indeed require from us such unflagging devotion and unwearied reverence that we should remain in God’s sight always the same, as we ought to be found on the Easter feast itself.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XLIX: On Lent XI  

I. The Lenten Fast is Incumbent on All Alike
On all days and seasons, indeed, dearly-beloved, some marks of the Divine goodness are set, and no part of the year is destitute of sacred mysteries, in order that, so long as proofs of our salvation meet us on all sides, we may the more eagerly accept the never-ceasing calls of God’s mercy. But all that is bestowed on the restoration of human souls in the divers works and gifts of grace is put before us more clearly and abundantly now, when no isolated portions of the Faith are to be celebrated, but the whole together. For as the Easter festival approaches, the greatest and most binding of fasts is kept, and its observance is imposed on all the faithful without exception; because no one is so holy that he ought not to be holier, nor so devout that he might not be devouter.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XLVI: On Lent VIII

I. Lent Must Be Kept Not Only by Avoiding Bodily Impurity But Also by Avoiding Errors of Thought and Faith
We know indeed, dearly-beloved, your devotion to be so warm that in the fasting, which is the forerunner of the Lord’s Easter, many of you will have forestalled our exhortations. But because the right practice of abstinence is needful not only to the mortification of the flesh but also to the purification of the mind, we desire your observance to be so complete that, as you cut down the pleasures that be long to the lusts of the flesh, so you should banish the errors that proceed from the imaginations of the heart. For he whose heart is polluted with no misbelief prepares himself with true and reasonable purification for the Paschal Feast, in which all the mysteries of our religion meet together.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XVI: On the Fast of the Tenth Month

I. The Prosperous Must Show Forth Their Thankfulness to God, by Liberality to the Poor and Needy
The transcendent power of God’s grace, dearly beloved, is indeed daily effecting in Christian hearts the transference of our every desire from earthly to heavenly things. But this present life also is passed through the Creator’s aid and sustained by His providence, because He who promises things eternal is also the Supplier of things temporal. As therefore we ought to give God thanks for the hope of future happiness towards which we run by faith, because He raises us up to a perception of the happiness in store for us, so for those things also which we receive in the course of every year, God should be honoured and praised, who having from the beginning given fertility to the earth and laid down laws of bearing fruit for every germ and seed, will never forsake his own decrees but will as Creator ever continue His kind administration of the things that He has made.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XVII: On the Fast of the Tenth Month VI  

I. The Duty of Fasting is Based on Both the Old and New Testaments, and is Closely Connected with the Duties of Prayer and Almsgiving
The teaching of the Law, dearly beloved, imparts great authority to the precepts of the Gospel, seeing that certain things are transferred from the old ordinances to the new, and by the very devotions of the Church it is shown that the Lord Jesus Christ “came not to destroy but to fulfil the Law.” For since the cessation of the signs by which our Saviour’s coming was announced, and the abolition of the types in the presence of the Very Truth, those things which our religion instituted, whether for the regulation of customs or for the simple worship of God, continue with us in the same form in which they were at the beginning, and what was in harmony with both Testaments has been modified by no change.

Click to read more ...

Wednesday
Dec232009

Sermon XXXIX: On Lent I  

I. The Benefits of Abstinence Shown by the Example of the Hebrews
In former days, when the people of the Hebrews and all the tribes of Israel were oppressed for their scandalous sins by the grievous tyranny of the Philistines, in order that they might be able to overcome their enemies, as the sacred story declares, they restored their powers of mind and body by the injunction of a fast. For they understood that they had deserved that hard and wretched subjection for their neglect of God’s commands, and evil ways, and that it was in vain for them to strive with arms unless they had first withstood their sin. Therefore abstaining from food and drink, they applied the discipline of strict correction to themselves, and in order to conquer their foes, first conquered the allurements of the palate in themselves.

Click to read more ...

/** *