We invite you to hear the chant 'Our Orthodox Faith' performed by the Festive Choir of St Elisabeth Convent (precentor Nun Juliania (Denisova)) at the Royal Voice Festival in 2018. The words are written by St Nicholas of Serbia.https://t.co/dDq9JkDZat#StElisabethConvent pic.twitter.com/zUSR1191fx
— St Elisabeth Convent. Orthodox Life And Chants (@StElisabethConv) December 10, 2020
Thursday, December 31, 2020
"Our Orthodox Faith"
Eucharistia and Prayer
Is receiving God through Holy Communion greater than receiving God through prayer? https://t.co/TwA1jepeoX
— OCN (@MyOCN) December 17, 2020
Question: Is receiving God through Holy Communion greater than receiving God through prayer?
Answer: We receive God through grace and grace comes to us in many ways. It comes when we invoke His Name with reverence and humility; when we pray and live by the word of God; when we receive Holy Communion with the testimony of a good conscience. We accumulate grace in every instant of our life, if we meet our fellows with a good heart, respect and honour. There are many means of acquiring the grace of God in order to preserve our heart alive with the sensation of God, and this is essential: for as long as our heart is warmed up by the grace of God, no alien thought can approach us and we are unassailable by the enemy.
We are able to invoke His Name with reverence and humility thanks to God's grace. The following answer has a more exact elucidation of our total dependence on God.
Question: I have a philosophical proud mind. How can we acquire stillness if we are proud?
Answer: Pride seems to accompany every our attempt to present ourselves before God in prayer and come close to Him. The most practical way to acquire humility is continual thanksgiving. The Spirit of God always inspires gratitude (1 Cor. 2:12). Father Sophrony makes a distinction between spiritual humility and ascetical humility. Ascetical humility consists of always reproaching and considering ourselves as worse than all, as we are commanded in the Gospel: ‘When ye shall have done all those things which are commanded you, say, We are unprofitable servants: we have done that which was our duty to do’ (Luke 17:10). As for spiritual humility, it is indescribable. It is granted to those who have already contemplated the beauty of the Risen Lord, the Light of His Face, which wounds them with the deep conviction that they are unworthy of such a loving God as Christ is.
I do note that he doesn't really answer the first question.
Labels:
Eucharist,
grace,
hesychasm,
metaphysics,
prayer,
righteousness,
sacrifice
Robert Grosseteste's Integralism
Robert Grosseteste’s stormy career as bishop of Lincoln offers guidance for postliberals thinking about Church and state. https://t.co/LtYqG6PiWl
— Semiduplex (@semiduplex) December 23, 2020
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