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Friday, 26 February 2021

Archbishop Seraphim (Sobolev)

 


On February 26, 1950, Archbishop Seraphim (Sobolev) of Boguchar (Bulgaria), an amazing clergyman and ascetic, a champion of purity of the Orthodox faith, fell asleep in the Lord. Born and educated in Russia, he found eternal rest in Bulgaria, the country where he served from 1921. As a theologian, he is known for his uncompromising stance against ecumenism, modernism, and the Sophianist heresy of Archpriest Sergius Bulgakov. Notably, the Bulgarians know of “Grandpa Vladyka Seraphim” not as a theologian, but more as an ascetic of piety and saint whom God bestowed with the abundant grace of performing miracles. School children and students come to “Dedushka’s” tomb at the St. Nicholas Cathedral in Sofia asking for good grades at exams; cancer patients ask for healing; and those who are in sorrow or sadness flock to him in hope of receiving consolation.

Elder Ephraim of Arizona


Time is continually passing; it is decreasing more and more. Every day that passes is another step toward death. We should know that even one tear of repentance is equivalent to a spiritual bath. Just as the body feels refreshed when it bathes, and just as clothes become clean when they are washed, similarly, the tears of a repentant soul purify the heart, purify the mind, purify the body, purify life, purify speech, and purify a person’s every action.
Let us kneel and pray with extreme humility! Every repentant soul is given words: it is granted enlightened prayer.




 

Tuesday, 23 February 2021

ANTIQUE HOLY BIBLE 1739 OLD & NEW TESTAMENT VOL 2 SAMUEL HUMPHREYS ILLUSTRATED

 LARGE ANTIQUE HOLY BIBLE 1739 OLD & NEW TESTAMENT VOLUME 2 SAMUEL HUMPHREYS, ILLUSTRATED.

41cm x 27cm x 7.75cm.
Weight 5.58kg.











Monday, 22 February 2021

books

 The acquisition of Christian books is necessary for those who can use them. For the mere sight of these books renders us less inclined to sin, and incites us to believe more firmly in righteousness. 'Reading the Scriptures is a great safeguard against sin.’

Abba Epiphanius



Sunday, 21 February 2021

abba moses


 

the nativity


 

pascha 2021

 


Chalk Sunday

 

'The first Sunday in Lent is called "Chalk Sunday". It is a very old custom that is followed up to the present day, in almost every parish in the country to chalk the clothes of those who have not married during Shrove, and were in a position to marry.'



contentment is found at the lords feet

LEARNING ABOUT PRAYING ,PRIDE AND HUMILITY!!!

 

Saint Catherine's Monastery





 THE ARK IN THE WILDERNESS

Saint Catherine's Monastery as a Unesco Heritage Site:
Criterion (i): The architecture of St Catherine's Monastery, the artistic treasures that it houses, and its domestic integration into a rugged landscape combine to make it an outstanding example of human creative genius.
Criterion (iii): St Catherine's Monastery is one of the very early outstanding examples in Eastern tradition of a Christian monastic settlement located in a remote area. It demonstrates an intimate relationship between natural grandeur and spiritual commitment.
Criterion (iv): Ascetic monasticism in remote areas prevailed in the early Christian church and resulted in the establishment of monastic communities in remote places. St Catherine's Monastery is one of the earliest of these and the oldest to have survived intact, being used for its initial function without interruption since the 6th century.
Criterion (vi): The St Catherine’s area, centred on the holy mountain of Mount Sinaï (Jebel Musa, Mount Horeb), like the Old City of Jerusalem, is sacred to three world religions: Christianity, Islam, and Judaism.
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Interesting facts about Saint Catherine’s Monastery:
Saint Catherine’s Monastery lies on the Sinai Peninsula in Egypt, at the mouth of a gorge at the foot of Mount Sinai.
Although it is commonly known as Saint Catherine’s, the monastery’s full official name is the Sacred Monastery of the God-Trodden Mount Sinai.
Built between 548 and 565, the monastery is one of the oldest working Christian monasteries in the world.
The monastery was built by order of the Eastern Roman Emperor Justinian I at the site where Moses [according to tradition saw] the burning bush.
The architecture of St Catherine’s Monastery, the artistic treasures that it houses, and its domestic integration into a rugged landscape combine to make it an outstanding example of human creative genius.
St. Catherine’s Monastery is surrounded on all sides by a massive wall 2.5 meters (8,2 feet) wide and 11 meters (36 feet) high. It is made of huge dressed granite blocks except for the upper sections, which were restored on orders of Napoleon using smaller, undressed stone blocks. Christian symbols, such as crosses and monograms, are carved on the wall in various places.
The monastery has never been destroyed in all its history, and thus it can be said to have preserved intact the distinctive qualities of its Greek and Roman heritage.
Members of other Christian confessions have honoured the monastery, coming as pilgrims to this holy place. But from its beginnings, the Christian inhabitants of Sinai belonged to the Greek speaking world, and it has remained so to this day.
According to tradition, Catherine of Alexandria was a Christian martyr sentenced to death on the wheel. When this failed to kill her, she was beheaded. According to tradition, angels took her remains to Mount Sinai. Around the year 800, monks from the Sinai Monastery found her remains.
The main church of the monastery is the Church of St. Catherine , which was built of granite by the Byzantine architect Stephen of Aila at the same time as the defensive walls. The church structure, the roof, and the carved cedar doors at the entrance are all originals from 527 AD.
Inside, the church has a broad main nave, two side aisles, an apse and a narthex. The nave is bordered by massive granite columns with capitals decorated with Christian symbols. Each aisle has three chapels and there is a chapel on each side of the apse.
The iconostasis dates to 1612 and was made in the Monastery’s dependency of Crete at the time of Archbishop Lavrentios. ...
The monastery has been honoured by rulers throughout its history. These include the Empress Helena, the Emperor Justinian, Mohammed the Founder of Islam, Sultan Selim I, the Empress Catherine of Russia, and Napoleon Bonaparte.
The monastery is controlled by the autocephalous Church of Sinai, part of the wider Eastern Orthodox Church, and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Repentance


 

Easter Procession by Illarion Pryanishnikov

 

Saturday, 6 February 2021

The Grand Inquisitor


“The Grand Inquisitor” was originally published as the fifth chapter of the fifth book of Dostoevsky’s novel The Brothers Karamazov, his last and perhaps his greatest work. Dostoevsky died just months after the novel was published, and he did not live to see the peculiar situation of his novel’s most famous chapter being excerpted as a short story—something he did not intend. A further peculiarity arises from the fact that the story is not excerpted the same way every time, so that whole paragraphs of the novel may be included or excluded from the short story, according to each editor’s sense of how best to make the part seem like a whole.

The legend of the Grand Inquisitor is a story within a story. Jesus returns to Earth during the Spanish Inquisition and is arrested. The Grand Inquisitor visits him in his cell to tell him that he is no longer needed on Earth. The Church, which is now allied with the Devil, is better able than Jesus to give people what they need. The story has often been considered a statement of Dostoevsky’s own doubts, which he wrestled with throughout his life.

Throughout the novel the themes of the legend are repeated and echoed by other characters and in other situations. Ivan explains some of what is to come before he tells the story, and he and Alyosha discuss the story when he is finished telling it. In the excerpted form, it is more difficult for readers to determine who is speaking, whose story it is, and how it is to be taken.

crime and punishment

 They dont want a living soul, the living souls demands life ..... they believe that a social system that has come out of a mathematical brain is going to organize all humanity #DostoevskySaturday



Venerable Xenia of Rome

 


St. Agatha

 Today is the Feast day of St. Agatha. Died today in 251 (born 225)

She never succumbed to the flesh. The emperor placed her in a brothel, she converted the owner Aphrodisia. After that, she was martyred.



The Resurrection

 


live like the birds

 


Jesus prayer

 


Saint moses

 




Saints of africa