St Luke Bulletin 022011

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St. Luke Orthodox Church (OCA), Anniston, Alabama, Sunday bulletin for February 20, 2011

Transcript of St Luke Bulletin 022011

THIS WEEK’S FASTSSunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday

Sunday, February 20, 2011 • 39th Sunday after PentecostSunday of the Prodigal Son

St. Leo, bishop of Catania in Sicily (ca. 780). Hieromartyr Eleutherius, bishop in Byzantium (2nd c.). Hieromartyr Sadoc (Sadoth), bishop of Persia, and 128 Martyrs with him (342). St. Eleutherius, bishop of Tournai (531). St. Agatho, pope of Rome (682). St. Eucherius, bishop of Orleans (ca. 740).

St. Agatho, wonderworker of the Kiev Caves (13th-14th c.). Martyrdom of St. Cornelius, abbot of the Pskov Caves Monastery, and his disciple St. Bassian of Murom (1570). Abbot Macarius and 34 monks and novices of Valaam Monastery martyred by the Lutherans: hieromonk Titus, schemamonk

Tikhon, monks Gelasius, Sergius, Varlaam, Sabbas, Conon, Sylvester, Cyprian, Pimen, John, Simonas, Jonah, David, Cornelius, Niphon, Athanasius, and Serapion, and novices Varlaam, Athanasius, Anthony, Luke, Leontius, Thomas, Dionysius, Philip, Ignatius, Basil, Pachomius, Basil, Theophilus,

John, Theodore, and John (1578). (Gr. Cal.: St. Bessarion the Great, wonderworker of Egypt [466]. St. Cindeus, bishop of Pisidia.)

Announcements Those who have registered for the Lenten Retreat will be in Birmingham Friday and Saturday.

Many Years Joshua celebrates his birthday on Tuesday, January 22.

The cover photo is of the the bell tower of St. Sophia Cathedral in Vologda, Russia, built 1568-1570.

THIS WEEK’S SERVICE SCHEDULE & SCRIPTURE READINGS

Monday, 2/21 NOSERVICE

1 John 2:18-3:10

Mark 11:1-11

Tuesday, 2/22 Vespers4 p.m.

1 John 3:11-20

Mark 14:10-42

Wednesday, 2/23 Matins8 a.m.

1 John 3:21-4:6

Mark 14:43-15:1

Thursday, 2/24Finding of the Head of St. John the Baptist

Matins8 a.m.

1 John 4:20-5:21

Mark 15:1-15

2 Cor. 4:6-15

Matt. 11:2-15

Friday, 2/25 Matins8 a.m.

2 John 1:1-13

Mark 15:22-25,33-41

Saturday, 2/26Memorial Sat. — Sat. of Meatfare

Vespers4 p.m.

1 Cor. 10:23-28

Luke 21:8-9,25-27,33-36

1 Thess. 4:13-17

John 5:24-30

Sunday, 2/27Sunday of the Last Judgement

Repose of St. Raphael of Brooklyn

Hours9:40 a.m.

Divine Liturgy10 a.m.

1 Cor. 8:8-9:2

Matt. 25:31-36

Hebrews 13:17-21

John 10:9-16

Service times are subject to change. Please check with Fr. Basil if in any doubt.

St. Luke Orthodox Christian ChurchDiocese of the South, Orthodox Church in America

The Rev. Father Basil Henry, Priest1415 Woodstock Ave. • Anniston, Alabama • www.stlukeanniston.org/

[email protected] • (256) 235-3893

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Great Vespers“Lord, I Call”

SUNDAY (Tone 6)Lead forth my soul from prison, that I may confess Thy name!Possessing victory over hell, O Christ, since Thou art free among the dead, Thou didst ascend the Cross, raising with Thyself those who sat in the shades of death. Drawing life from Thy light, O Almighty Sav-ior, have mercy on us!

The righteous await me, till Thou shalt reward me.Today Christ tramples on death, for He is risen as He said! Let us all sing this song, for He has granted joy to the world: “O Light unapproachable, O Fountain of life! O Savior Almighty, have mercy on us!”

Out of the depths have I cried unto Thee, O Lord; O Lord, hear my voice!

Where shall we sinners flee from Thee Who art in all creation? In heaven Thou dwellest! In hell Thou didst trample on death! In the depths of the sea? Even there is Thy hand, O Master! To Thee we flee, and falling before Thee, we pray: “O Thou Who didst rise from the dead, have mercy on us!”

Let Thine ears give heed to the voice of my prayer!In Thy Cross, we glory, O Christ. We sing and glorify Thy Resurrection. For Thou art our God, and we know no other than Thee!

If Thou observest transgression, Lord, O Lord, who shall stand? For with Thee is propitiation.

We will always bless the Lord by singing of His Resur-rection! For He endured the Cross, trampling down death by death.For Thy name’s sake have I waited upon Thee, O Lord; my soul

hath waited upon Thy word; my soul hath hoped in the Lord.Glory to Thy might, O Lord, for Thou didst over-throw the prince of death! By Thy Cross renewing us, granting us life and incorruption.

Sunday of the PRODIGAL SON (Tone 1)From the morning watch even to the night, let Israel hope in

the Lord!Rich and fertile was the earth allotted to us, but all we planted were the seeds of sin. We reaped the sheaves of evil with the sickle of laziness; we failed to place them on the threshing floor of sorrow. Now we beg Thee, O Lord, eternal Master of the harvest: “May Thy love become the breeze to winnow the straw of our worth-less deeds! Make us like the precious wheat to be stored in heaven, and save us all!”

For with the Lord there is mercy and with Him is plenteous redemption, and He shall redeem Israel from all his iniquities.Rich and fertile was the earth allotted to us…

O praise the Lord, all ye nations, praise Him, all ye people!Brothers, our purpose is to know the power of God’s goodness. For when the Prodigal Son abandoned his sin, he hastened to the refuge of his father. That good man embraced him and welcomed him; he killed the fatted calf and celebrated with heavenly joy. Let us learn from this example to offer thanks to the Father, Who loves all men, and to the glorious Victim, the Savior of our souls!For His mercy hath been confirmed upon us and the truth of

the Lord remaineth forever.Brothers, our purpose is to know…

Sunday of the PRODIGAL SON (Tone 2)Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit…

What great blessings have I forsaken, wretch that I am? From what kingdom have I miserably fallen? I have squandered the riches that were given me; I have transgressed the commandments. Woe to me when I shall be condemned to eternal fire! Cry out to Christ, O my soul, before the end draws nigh: “Receive me as the Prodigal, O God, and have mercy on me!”

DOGMATIKON (Tone 6)Both now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.

Who will not bless thee, O most holy Virgin? Who will not sing of thy most pure childbearing? The only-begotten Son shone timelessly from the Father, but from thee He was ineffably incarnate. God by nature yet man for our sake; not two persons, but One known in two natures. Entreat Him, O pure and all-blessed Lady, to have mercy on our souls!

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ApostichaSUNDAY (Tone 6)

Thy Resurrection, O Christ our Savior, the Angels in heaven sing! Enable us on earth to glorify Thee in pu-rity of heart!The Lord hath become King; with beauty hath he clothed himself.Destroying the gates of hell; breaking the chains of death; Thou didst resurrect the fallen human race as Almighty God! O Lord, Who didst rise from the dead, glory to Thee!For He hath established the world, which shall not be moved.

Desiring to return us to Paradise, Christ was nailed to the Cross and placed in a tomb. The Myrrhbearing Women sought Him with tears, crying, “Woe to us, O Savior! How dost Thou deign to descend to death? What place can hold Thy life-bearing body? Come to us as Thou didst promise! Take away our wailing and tears!” Then the Angel appeared to them: “Stop your lamentations! Go, proclaim to the Apostles: ‘The Lord is risen, granting us purification and great mercy!’”Holiness belongeth to Thy house, O Lord, unto length of days!Having been crucified as Thou didst will, by Thy buri-al Thou didst capture death, O Christ, and arise on the third day as God in glory, granting the world un-ending life and great mercy!

Sunday of the PRODIGAL SON (Tone 6)Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit…

I, a wretched man, hide my face in shame: I have squan-dered the riches my Father gave to me; I went to live with senseless beasts; I sought their food and hungered, for I had not enough to eat. I will arise, I will return to my compassionate Father; He will accept my tears, as I kneel before Him, crying: “In Thy tender love for all men, receive me as one of Thy servants and save me!”

THEOTOKION (Tone 6)Bothnow and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.

Christ the Maker, Redeemer, and Lord proceeded from thy womb, O All-Pure Virgin. And putting on my nature, set man free from the ancestral curse. So we sing to thee without ceasing, O All-Pure Virgin, as Mother of God! With the salutation of the angel: Rejoice, O Sovereign Lady, Protection, Refuge, and Salvation of our souls!

TropariaSUNDAY (Tone 6)

The angelic powers were at Thy tomb, and the guards became as dead men. Mary stood by Thy grave, seek-ing Thine immaculate body, Thou didst despoil hell, not being tempted by it. Thou didst go to meet the Virgin, granting life. O Lord, who didst rise from the dead, glory to Thee.

Resurrectional Dismissal Theotokion (Tone 5)Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit,

now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.Thou Who called Thy Mother blessed, came of Thine own will to the Passion. Shining on the Cross, desiring to recall Adam, Thou didst say to the Angels: “Rejoice with Me for the lost coin has been found.” Thou Who hast ordered all things in wisdom our God, glory to Thee!!

“The Lenten worship is...a school of repentance. It teaches us what is repentance and how to acquire the spirit of repentance. It prepares

us for and leads us to the spiritual regeneration without which ‘absolution’ remains meaningless. It is, in short, both teaching

about repentance and the way of repentance. And since there can be no real Christian life without repentance, without this constant ‘re-evaluation’ of life, the Lenten worship is an essential part of the liturgical tradition of the Church.”

Fr. Alexander Schmemann (1921–1983)

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Divine Liturgy of St John ChrysostomBeatitude Verses

SUNDAYBlessed are the merciful for they shall obtain mercy.

Remember me, my God and Savior, when Thou comest into Thy kingdom and save me as Thou alone lovest mankind.

Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.Through the wood of the cross Thou hast saved again Adam who was beguiled by the tree and the thief as he cried aloud: ‘Remember me, O Lord, in Thy kingdom.’Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God.O Giver of life, having broken the gates and chains of hell; Thou, Savior, hast made all men rise crying aloud: ‘Glory to Thy resurrection.’

Blessed are those who are persecuted for righteousness’ sake, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven.

Do Thou Who hast by Thy burial and Thy resurrec-tion despoiled death, and filled all things with joy, re-member me as Thou art compassionate.

Sunday of the PRODIGAL SONBlessed are you when men shall revile you and persecute you,

and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake.The depth of sin ever holds me fast, and a tempest of transgressions drags me down. Pilot me, Christ my God, to the harbour of life and save me, King of glory.Rejoice and be exceedingly glad, for great is your reward in heaven.I have wickedly squandered my Father’s wealth, and reduced to poverty, I am filled with shame, enslaved to fruitless thoughts. Therefore I cry to thee who lovest mankind, ‘Take pity on me and save me’.

Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit…I am wasted with starvation of every good, and es-tranged from thee, O Christ supremely good. Take pity on me as I now return, and save me as I sing the praise of thy love for mankind.

Both now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.Maiden, who conceived Christ the Saviour and Master, count me, beggared of every kind of good, worthy of salvation, pure Virgin, that I may sing the praise of your mighty acts.

TropariaSUNDAY (Tone 6)

The angelic Powers were at thy tomb and the guards became as dead men. Mary stood by thy grave, seeking thine immaculate Body. Thou didst despoil hell, not being tempted by it. Thou didst go to meet the Virgin granting life. O Lord, who didst rise from the dead, glory to thee.

ST. LUKE the Evangelist (Tone 5)The Holy Apostle, the all-hymned Luke, who is ac-knowledged by the Church of Christ as the recorder of the Acts of the Apostles and the splendid author of the Gospel of Christ, let us praise with sacred hymns as a Physician who healeth the infirmities of man and the ailments of nature, who cleanseth spiritual wounds and prayeth unceasingly for our souls.

KontakiaSUNDAY (Tone 6)

With His life-creating palm, from the valleys of gloom, the life-giver Christ God hath raised all the dead. He hath bestowed resurrection on the human dough, for He is the Saviour of all: the Resurrection, and Life, and God of all.

ST. LUKE the Evangelist (Tone 4)Glory to the Father and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit…

Thou becamest a disciple of God the Word, with Paul thou didst enlighten all the world, casting out its dark-ness by composing the Holy Gospel of Christ.

Sunday of the PRODIGAL SON (Tone 3)Both now and ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.

I have recklessly forgotten Thy glory, O Father; and among sinners I have scattered the riches which Thou hadst given me. Therefore I cry to Thee like the Prod-igal: “I have sinned before Thee, O compassionate Fa-ther; receive me a penitent, and make me as one of Thy hired servants!”

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ProkeimenonSUNDAY (Tone 6)

Save, O Lord, Thy people, and bless Thine inheritance.

Vs: To thee, O Lord, will I cry; O my God, keep thou not silent toward me.

Epistle ReadingSUNDAY

1 Corinthians 6:12-20Brethren, All things are lawful unto me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but I will not be brought under the power of any. Meats for the belly, and the belly for meats: but God shall detroy both it and them. Now the body is not for fornication, but for the Lord; and the Lord for the body. And God hath both raised up the Lord, and will also raise up us by his own power. Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ? shall I then take the members of Christ, and make them the members of an harlot? God forbid. What? know ye not that he which is joined to an harlot is one body? for two, saith he, shall be one flesh. But he that is joined unto the Lord is one spirit. Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is without the body; but he that committeth fornication sinneth against his own body. What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.

Alleluia VersesSUNDAY (Tone 6)

Vs: He who dwells in the shelter of the Most High will abide in the shadow of the heavenly God.

Vs: He will say to the Lord: “My Protector and my Refuge; my God, in Whom I trust.”

Gospel ReadingSUNDAY

Luke 15:11-32The Lord said this parable: A certain man had two sons: And the younger of them said to his father, Fa-ther, give me the portion of goods that falleth to me. And he divided unto them his living. And not many days after the younger son gathered all together, and

took his journey into a far country, and there wasted his substance with riotous living. And when he had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that land; and he began to be in want. And he went and joined himself to a citizen of that country; and he sent him into his fields to feed swine. And he would fain have filled his belly with the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave unto him. And when he came to himself, he said, How many hired servants of my fa-ther’s have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger! I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and before thee, And am no more worthy to be called thy son: make me as one of thy hired ser-vants. And he arose, and came to his father. But when he was yet a great way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and ran, and fell on his neck, and kissed him. And the son said unto him, Father, I have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight, and am no more worthy to be called thy son. But the father said to his servants, Bring forth the best robe, and put it on him; and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet: And bring hither the fatted calf, and kill it; and let us eat, and be merry: For this my son was dead, and is alive again; he was lost, and is found. And they began to be merry.

Now his elder son was in the field: and as he came and drew nigh to the house, he heard musick and dancing. And he called one of the servants, and asked what these things meant. And he said unto him, Thy broth-er is come; and thy father hath killed the fatted calf, because he hath received him safe and sound. And he was angry, and would not go in: therefore came his father out, and intreated him. And he answering said to his father, Lo, these many years do I serve thee, nei-ther transgressed I at any time thy commandment: and yet thou never gavest me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends: But as soon as this thy son was come, which hath devoured thy living with harlots, thou hast killed for him the fatted calf. And he said unto him, Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is thine. It was meet that we should make merry, and be glad: for this thy brother was dead, and is alive again; and was lost, and is found.

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OSunday of the Prodigal Son

On the third Sunday of preparation for Lent, we hear the parable of the Prodigal Son (LK. 15:11-32). Together with the hymns on this day, the parable reveals to us the time of repentance as man’s return from exile. The prodigal son, we are told, went to a far country and there spent all that he had. A far country! It is this unique definition of our human condition that we must assume and make ours as we begin our approach to God. A man who has never had that experience, be it only very briefly, who has never felt that he is exiled from God and from real life, will never understand what Christianity is about. And the one who is perfectly

“at home” in this world and its life, who has never been wounded by the nostalgic desire for another Re-ality, will not understand what is repentance.

Repentance is often simply identified as a cool and “objective” enumeration of sins and transgressions, as the act of “pleading guilty” to a legal indictment. Confession and absolution are seen as being of a ju-ridical nature. But something very essential is over-looked-- without which neither confession nor abso-lution have any real meaning or power. This

“something” is precisely the feeling of alienation from God, from the joy of communion with Him, from

the real life as created and given by God. It is easy indeed to confess that I have not fasted on prescribed days, or missed my prayers, or become angry. It is quite a different thing, however, to realize suddenly that I have defiled and lost my spiritual beauty, that I am far away from my real home, my real life, and that something precious and pure and beautiful has been hopelessly broken in the very texture of my existence. Yet this, and only this, is repentance, and therefore it is also a deep desire to return, to go back, to recover that lost home....

One liturgical peculiarity of this “Sunday of the Prodigal Son” must be especially mentioned here. At Sunday Matins, following the solemn and joyful Psalms of the Polyeleion, we sing the sad and nostal-gic Psalm 137:

By the rivers of Babylon, there we sat down, and we wept when we remembered Zion... How shall we sing the Lord’s song in a strange land? If I forget thee, O Jerusalem, let my right hand forget her cunning. If I do not remember thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth; if I prefer not Jerusalem above my chief joy...

It is the Psalm of exile. It was sung by the Jews in their Baby-lonian captivity as they thought of their holy city of Jerusalem. It has become forever the song of man as he realizes his exile form God, and realizing it, becomes man again: the one who can never be fully satisfied by anything in this fallen world, for by nature and vocation he is a pilgrim of the Absolute. This Psalm will be sung twice more: on the last two Sundays before Lent. It reveals Lent itself as pilgrimage and repen-tance—as return.

The preceding was an excerpt from Great Lent, by Fr. Alexander Schmemann from Chapter 2: Preparation for Lent

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Theology of Lay Ministries - Volume II, 1996

Finding One’s Vocation in LifeBy Fr. Thomas Hopko

In addition to the direct help of God, so to speak, we also need His help as it comes to us through others. We need the guidance of those who are expe-rienced in His ways, particularly our fathers and mothers in the faith. “Ask your fathers, and they will show you; your elders and they will teach you.” (Dt. 32:7) The saints of the Church love to repeat this line from the song of Moses. To hear God’s voice, to discern His desires for us, to discover His purposes for our lives, we need the help of those who have found Him, or, perhaps more accurately, those who have been found by Him. We receive this help in the life of the Church, first of all by our participation in the services and sacraments. We find it also in the Bible and in the lives and teachings of the saints. And we find it in the pastors and teachers whom God gives us. God promises that those who seek instruc-tion will never be left without it. He Himself will see to

it, as the saying goes, that “when the disciple is ready, the Master will appear.” Without obedience to God’s Word and Spirit in the services, sacraments, scriptures and saints of the Church, we who claim to be Christians will never discover our calling in life. For we will have rejected the means that God has given us to find it.

SSt Leo the Bishop of Catania in Sicily

Saint Leo was bishop of the city of Catania, in Sicily. He was famed for his benevo-lence and charity, and his Christian love for the poor and the vagrant. The Lord grant-ed him the gifts of healing various illnesses, and working miracles. When St Leo was Bishop of Catania, there was a certain sorcerer named Heliodorus, who impressed people with his fake miracles. This fellow was originally a Christian, but then he rejected Christ and became a servant of the devil.

St Leo often urged Heliodorus to repent of his wicked deeds and return to God, but in vain. Once, Heliodorus impudently entered the church where the bishop was serving, and tried to create a disturbance, sowing confusion and temptation by his sorcery.

Seeing the people beset by devils under the sorcer’s spell, St Leo realized that the time for gentle persuasion had passed. He calmly emerged from the

altar and, tying his omophorion around the

magician’s neck, he led him out of the church into the city square. There he forced Heliodorus to admit to all his wicked deeds. He commanded that a fire be lit, and jumped into the fire with the sorcerer. Thus they stood in the fire until Heliodorus got burnt. St Leo, by the power of God, remained unharmed. This miracle brought St Leo great renown during his lifetime.

When he died, a woman with an issue of blood received healing at his grave. The body of the saint was placed in a church of the holy Martyr Lucy (December 13), which he himself had built. Later on, his relics were transferred into the church of St Martin the Merciful, Bishop of Tours (November 11).

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The Orthodox Faith > Doctrine > The Symbol of Faith

Nicene CreedIt is also used as the formal statement of faith by a non-Orthodox Christian entering the communion of the Orthodox Church. In the same way the creed became part of the life of Orthodox Christians and an essential element of the Divine Liturgy of the Orthodox Church at which each person formally and officially accepts and renews his baptism and membership in the Church. Thus, the Symbol of Faith is the only part of the liturgy (repeated in another form just before Holy Commu-nion) which is in the first person. All other songs and prayers of the liturgy are plural, beginning with “we”. Only the credal statement begins with “I.” This, as we shall see, is because faith is first personal, and only then corporate and communal.

To be an Orthodox Christian is to affirm the Orthodox Christian faith—not merely the words, but the essen-tial meaning of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan symbol of faith. It means as well to affirm all that this state-ment implies, and all that has been expressly developed from it and built upon it in the history of the Orthodox Church over the centuries down to the present day.

We Must Be Faithful Where We AreFinally, we are taught that to discover God’s will for us, we must be faithful to Him where we are, faithful to and in the conditions in which He has placed us. One of the greatest obstacles to the discovery of one’s vocation in life, which is a clear expression of our disobedience and self-will, is the desire to be someone else, someplace else, sometime else. We have all heard people say that if only they lived in another place, or in another time, or with other people...then they could be holy. Or, if only they were married. Or, if only they were not married. If only this, and if only that! We must come to see how sinful such an attitude is, how crazy and deluded. It is simply blasphemy. And it may well be the blasphemy against the Holy Spirit which Christ says cannot be forgiven, for it dares to tell God that our failures in life are His fault for making us the way we are. (Cf. Mt. 12:31; Lk. 12:10)

God has made us who we are. He has put us where we are, even when it is our own self-will that has moved us. He has given us our time and our place. He has given us our specific destiny. We must come to the point when we do not merely resign ourselves to these realities, but when we love them, bless them, give thanks to God for them as the conditions for our self-fulfillment as per-sons, the means to our sanctity and salvation.

Being faithful where we are is the basic sign that we will

God’s will for our lives. The struggle to “blossom where we are planted,” as the saying goes, is the way to discern God’s presence and power in our lives, to hear His voice, to accomplish His purposes, to share His holiness. Jesus said that only those who are “faithful in little” inherit much and get set over much. Those who are not faithful in the little things of life, and thereby fail to accept and to use what God provides, end up losing the little that they have, or—as Jesus says in St. Luke’s gospel—the little that they think that they have, for even that “little” may exist only in their own deluded imaginations. (Cf. Mt. 25:14-30; Lk. 19:11-27, 8:18)

So the summary of the whole thing is this: We must labor to do the smallest good and to avoid the small-est sin in the smallest, seemingly most insignificant de-tails of life. We must accept who we are, where we are, when we are and how we are, and struggle to sanctify our real state of existence by the grace of God; resisting the world, the flesh and the devil and gaining the Spirit of God through Christ in the Church. We must partici-pate in the services and sacraments, be fed on the scrip-tures and imitate the saints. We must seek out the help of the experienced, and heed their counsel and advice. And we must go to God Himself and say with a pure heart: “Thy will be done! And He will see that we find our vocation and calling in life, and become the saints that he has willed us to be from the beginning.

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Having the Guest RoomReadyThis weekly bulletin insert complements the curriculum published by the Department of Christian Education of the Orthodox Church inAmerica. This and many other Christian Education resources are available at http://dce.oca.org.

  On February 22 we read about the preparations for the Passover meal thatJesus instructs His disciples to make in Mark 14:10-42.

There's a good bit of mystery in the opening verses of this passage. Jesus sendstwo of the disciples into the city, and tells them in amazingly specific detail whatwill happen there. He says that a man carrying a jar of water will meet them—theydon't even have to look for him, or be told what he looks like so that they willrecognize him! Then they are to follow him "wherever he goes" and speak to theowner of the house he enters. This owner or householder will show them anupper room that is "furnished and ready" for them. This is the room in which theyshould prepare for the meal that Jesus and His beloved disciples will share.

The disciples follow the Lord's instructions—they go to the city and find everything"as He had told them," and they make their preparations. But the mysteriousquality of it all must have occurred to them. Who is this householder? How andwhen were these plans made? Most important, who but the Lord could have donethis? We will soon enter the period of Great Lent, and many more things will be

found to be "as He had told us"—His fulfillment of the Old Testament prophecies, His Passion and Crucifixion, andultimately His Resurrection.

When the disciples meet the householder, they pose the question that Jesus, the Teacher, has directed them to ask:"Where is my guest room, where I am to eat the Passover with My disciples?" (14:14). There isn't a moment ofhesitation; the guest room is ready and waiting, as Jesus knew it would be.

Yet the householder is never identified. He has an important place in the story of the Last Supper, and he seems to beperfectly willing to fulfill his role without having his actions praised, or his name known. Perhaps he didn't evencomprehend the significance of what he was being asked to do for the Lord, but he did it faithfully and obediently.

"Where is my guest room?" is a question, many Bible commentators suggest, that the Lord also asks us. Great Lent willoffer us a chance to consider whether we have a place in our hearts "furnished and ready" for Him, or whether we'llneed to scramble around to clean up the place, and push other things out of the way to make room for Him to enter.Another question follows, too. Will we look for praise and attention because we have prepared a place, or can we besatisfied to be like the householder, simply making ready for Him out of love and obedience with no expectation ofreward?

Jesus says in Revelation 3:20, "I stand at the door and knock." If the room is ready, we can invite Him in, and begin tolive in the Kingdom with Him today.

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Across5. Proverbs 19:22 What is desired in a man is _______

7. Proverbs 19:17 He who has _____ on the poor lends to the LORD

9. 2 Corinthians 8:9 for your sakes He became poor, that you through His _______ might become rich

Down1. Psalm 10:2 The ____ in his pride persecutes the poor

2. Proverbs 14:31 He who ______ the poor reproaches his Maker

3. James 2:5 Has God not chosen the poor of this world to be rich in ______

4. Proverbs 14:21 But he who has _____ on the poor, happy is he

6. Luke 6:20 Blessed are you poor, For yours is the ________ of God.

8. Proverbs 19:17 Whoever shuts

his ears to the cry of the ____ Will also cry himself and not be heard

Crossword Puzzle–The Poor

St. Luke Orthodox Christian Church1415 Woodstock Ave.Anniston, AL 36207

One of the oldest churches in Romania, near Buzau; built around the year 500; made in a single piece of bazalt.