In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Rejoicing today in the triumph of Orthodoxy on this first Sunday of
Lent, we joyfully commemorate three events: one event belonging to the
past; one event to the present; and one event which still belongs to the
future.
Whenever we have any feast or joy in the Church, we Orthodox first of
all look back — for in our present life we depend on what happened in
the past. We depend first of all, of course, on the first and the
ultimate triumph—that of Christ Himself. Our faith is rooted in that
strange defeat which became the most glorious victory — the defeat of a
man nailed to the cross, who rose again from the dead, who is the Lord
and the Master of the world. This is the first triumph of Orthodoxy.
This is the content of all our commemorations and of all our joy. This
man selected and chose twelve men, gave them power to preach about that
defeat and that victory, and sent them to the whole world saying preach
and baptize, build up the Church, announce the Kingdom of God. And you
know, my brothers and sisters, how those twelve men — very simple men
indeed, simple fishermen — went out and preached. The world hated them,
the Roman Empire persecuted them, and they were covered with blood. But
that blood was another victory. The Church grew, the Church covered the
universe with the true faith. After 300 years of the most unequal
conflict between the powerful Roman Empire and the powerless Christian
Church, the Roman Empire accepted Christ as Lord and Master. That was
the second triumph of Orthodoxy. The Roman Empire recognized the one
whom it crucified and those whom it persecuted as the bearers of truth,
and their teaching as the teaching of life eternal. The Church
triumphed. But then the second period of troubles began.
The following centuries saw many attempts to distort the faith, to
adjust it to human needs, to fill it with human content. In each
generation there were those who could not accept that message of the
cross and resurrection and life eternal. They tried to change it, and
those changes we call heresies. Again there were persecutions. Again,
Orthodox bishops, monks and laymen defended their faith and were
condemned and went into exile and were covered with blood. And after
five centuries of those conflicts and persecutions and discussions, the
day came which we commemorate today, the day of the final victory of
Orthodoxy as the true faith over all the heresies. It happened on the
first Sunday of Lent in the year 843 in Constantinople. After almost 100
years of persecution directed against the worship of the holy icons,
the Church finally proclaimed that the truth had been defined, that the
truth was fully in the possession of the Church. And since then all
Orthodox people, wherever they live, have gathered on this Sunday to
proclaim before the world their faith in that truth, their belief that
their Church is truly apostolic, truly Orthodox, truly universal. This
is the event of the past that we commemorate today.
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