This Side of the Pulpit » Entries tagged with "sermons"
What the Fathers Preached
The confession of his faith is also part of the fruits of man. For he who cries out according to God, with a voice of true humility, and true confession of faith, is a sheep. But he who utters blasphemies against the truth, and howls against God, is a wolf. (St. John Chrysostom) … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
Text: Mark 8:1-9 We must therefore meditate deeply upon the sacred teaching that proceeds from the lips of truth when he says: for some of them came from afar off. For it is such as have nothing to do with the evil doing and carnal corruption who hastened to serve the Omnipotent God. He does not come from afar off who through innocence and integrity of soul was already close to God. Another, free of unchastity, stained by no evil, who has known only marriage, devotes himself to the works of the spirit; neither does he come from afar off: for by reason of his service to God he does not wander far from him after things forbidden. then there are those who after the sins of the flesh, after having … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
Text: Mark 8:1-9 There the people sat on the grass; here upon the ground. On both occasions the same manner of speech, the same grace, the same power, the one Divinity. There they sit on grass; that is, upon the dead works of the flesh-for all flesh is grass, as the prophet says (Isaiah 40). Here they sit upon the ground; that is, they tread down the things of earth. ThereĀ 5000 are fed, and this number has reference to the Jews; for Peter, after the resurrection of the Lord, lifted up his voice, and the number who believed was made 5000. But here are 4000; which means that all peoples, from the four points of the heavens, are filled with the sevenfold grace of the Spirit unto life eternal. And so, … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
Re: Mark 8:1-9 In the earlier account of the five loaves and two fishes he fed 5000 men; here he feeds 4000 men from seven loaves and a few fishes. There the disciples suggest to the Lord, saying: this is a desert place, and the hour is now past; send away the multitudes, that going into the towns they may buy themselves victuals. Here the disciples are wholly silent. It is the Lord alone who is solicitous for them. Let us see why they are silent. Because they were not yet sent to preach to the Gentiles, but rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. Therefore the first parable relates to the Jews, but this to the Gentiles. There, there were five loaves; that is, the five books … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
This week from Mark 8: 1-9: The Feeding of the Four Thousand. We know that 4000 men were filled from the seven loaves. What could be more wondrous? And this was not all. Seven baskets were filled with fragments that remained. Oh mighty mysteries! They were wrought; and the works have spoken. For these works, if you understand them, are also words. and you are also part of the 4000, because you live under the fourfold Gospel. The women and children were not included in the number…. As though those who are without understanding, and the effeminate, are outside the number, nevertheless let these also eat. Let them eat. Perhaps the children will grow up, and be children no more. Let the effeminate be reformed, and be sanctified. Let them eat. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
Saint Peter Chrysologus But after the heavenly fire, the fire of the Holy Ghost, had poured down in a heavenly rain upon the Apostles, and warmed with its fire them no less cold as well as dark hearts of mortal men, the Woman, that is the Church, lift her lamp, that is, the power of vision of her soul, the enlightened eyes of your heart (Ephesians 1:18). She therefore lift her lamp and through the subsequent labor of the Apostles turned upside down that Judaic house that was blind with the darkness of ignorance, until she finds in Christ the silver piece that was lost from the 10…. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
St. Cyril of Alexandria And now reflect together with me, beloved, upon the extent of the Kingdom of our Savior, and upon the wondrous wisdom of his divine purposes. For, he says, the number of the sheep is 100; here referring to the full and perfect number of the rational beings subject to him. The number of hundred is ever the perfect number, made up of 10 decades. From the inspired Scripture we learned that a thousand thousands minister to him, and ten thousand times a hundred thousand surround his throne (Dan. 7:10). A hundred therefore is the number of his sheep, of whom one wondered from the flock, namely, the race of men, and for which the Supreme Pastor of all goes searching, leaving the rest, that is, the remaining 99, … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
St. Luke 15:1-10 St. Ambrose And so it was not without design that the holy Luke places in order before us the three parables: that of the sheep that strayed and was found, that of the silver piece that was lost and also was found, that of the son who was dead (through sin) and who returned to life; so that sustained by this threefold cure we may seek to cure our own wounds: for a triple rope does not break. Who are these three persons: the shepherd, the woman, father? Is not Christ the Shepherd, the church the woman, and God the Father? Christ who took upon himself our sin bears you upon his own body; the church searches for you; the Father receives you back. As a Shepherd he brings us … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
What the Fathers Preached
Luke 14:16-24 The Parable of the Feast: Gregory: and aptly is curiosity signified by the bodily senses, for they cannot see the things of the mind, but only outward things. And as it seeks to search into the lives of others, and is incapable of knowing its own inward life, it is ever eager to know of outward things. But we must note that each who excuses himself from the supper of the Inviter, the one because of his farm, the other because he must prove his piety of oxen, mingles with his reply some words of humility; for when he says, I pray thee, there is humility in his words; but pride in the deed. … Read entire article »
Filed under: Theology
Journal: June, Week One
The girls are back from their trip to Florida! They left with my parents on May 22 and we picked them up in picturesque Henryetta, OK yesterday afternoon. It’s good to have them home. Since the girls missed my birthday on Saturday, they insisted we wait to celebrate it until today. So it’s my second birthday today. I am opening a few presents, eating chocolate cake with penuche icing, and doing whatever I want. Nice to have a day off. Tomorrow it’s back to work, and a busy week with several members having surgery, a few counseling appointments, a private wedding, working on the PowerPoint for Romans 8, planning a committee meeting agenda and setting that up, finishing up my GTD system with filing and general organization, the sermon, and preparing for … Read entire article »
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