Thursday, December 25, 2014

Divine Liturgy, The Nativity of Christ





Which Means...


The Bishop of Rome, Christmas











Christmas: "God is in love with our smallness"

“More so,” the Pope went on to ask, “do we have the courage to welcome with tenderness the difficulties and problems of those who are near to us, or do we prefer impersonal solutions, perhaps effective but devoid of the warmth of the Gospel? How much the world needs tenderness today! The Christian response cannot be different from God’s response to our smallness. Life must be met with goodness, with meekness. When we realize that God is in love with our smallness, that he made himself small in order to better encounter us, we cannot help but open our hearts to him, and beseech him: “Lord, help me to be like you, give me the grace of tenderness in the most difficult circumstances of life, give me the grace of closeness in the face of every need, of meekness in every conflict.”

I'll take Athanasius...

Christmas Message of Patriarch Bartholomew


Eastern Christian Books: Married Catholic Priests (Take 2)

Eastern Christian Books: Married Catholic Priests (Take 2)

On the Night of the Nativity


Byzantine Hymn of the Nativity