Friday, March 15, 2013

Origen on Prayer Chapter Three

Origen on Prayer Origen

CHAPTER III

OBJECTIONS TO PRAYER

If then I must next, as you have urged, set forth in the first place the arguments of those who told
that nothing is accomplished as a result of prayers and therefore allege that prayer is superfluous,
I shall not hesitate to do that also according to my ability—the term prayer being now used in its
more common and general sense. In such disrepute indeed is the view and to such a degree has it
failed to obtain champions of distinction that, among those who admit a Providence and set a God
over the universe, not a soul can be found who does not believe in prayer.

The opinion (sentiment) belongs either to utter atheists who deny the existence of God, or assume
a God, as far as the name goes, but deprive Him of providence. Already, it must be said, the adverse
inworking, with intent to wrap the most impious of opinions around the name of Christ and around
the teaching of the Son of God, has made some converts on the needlessness of prayer—a sentiment
which find champions in those who by every means do away with outward forms, eschewing
baptism and eucharist alike, misrepresenting the Scriptures as not actually meaning this that we
call prayer but as teaching something quite different from it.

Those who reject prayers, while, that is to say, setting a God over the universe and affirming
Providence—for it is not my present task to consider the statements of those who by every means
do away with a God or Providence—might reason as follows: God knows all things before they
come to be. There is nothing that upon its entrance into existence is then first known by Him as
previously unknown. What need to send up prayer to One who, even before we pray, knows what
things we have need of? For the heavenly Father knows what things we have need of before we
ask Him.

It is reasonable to believe that as Father and Artificer of the universe who loves all things that are
and abhors nothing that He has made, quite apart from prayer He safely manages the affairs of each
like a father who champions his infant children without awaiting their entreaty when they are either
utterly incapable of asking or through ignorance often desirous of getting the opposite of what is
to their profit and advantage. We men come further short of God even than the merest children of
the intelligence of their parents. And in all likelihood the things that are to be are not only foreknown
but prearranged by God, and nothing takes place contrary to His prearrangement. Were anyone to
pray for sunrise he would be thought a simpleton for entreating through prayer for the occurrence
of what was to take place quite apart from his prayer: In like manner a man would be a fool to
believe that his prayer was responsible for the occurrence of what was to take place in any case
even had he never prayed.

And again, as it is the height of madness to imagine that, because one suffers discomfort and fever
under the sun at Summer Solstice, the Sun is through prayer to be transferred to the Springtime
Zodiac, in order that one may have the benefit of temperate air, so it would be the height of
infatuation to imagine that by reason of prayer one would not experience the misfortunes that meet
the race of men by necessity. Moreover, if it be true that sinners are estranged from birth and the
righteous man has been set apart from his mother’s womb, and if, while as yet they are unborn and
have done neither good nor evil, it is said the elder shall serve the younger, that the elective purpose
of God may stand based not on works but on the Caller, it is in vain that we entreat for forgiveness
of sins or to receive a spirit of strength to the end that, Christ empowering us, we may have strength
for all things.

If we are sinners, we are estranged from birth: if on the other hand we were set apart from our
mother’s womb, the best of things will come our way even though we do not pray. It is prophesied
before his birth that Jacob shall be over Esau and that his brother shall serve him: what has prayer
to do with that? Of what impiety is Esau guilty that he is hated before his birth? To what purpose
does Moses pray, as is found in the ninetieth psalm, if God is his refuge since before the mountains
were settled and the earth and world were formed. Besides, of all that are to be saved, it is recorded
in the Epistle to Ephesians that the Father elected them in Him, in Christ, before the world’s
foundation, that they should be holy and blameless before Him, preordaining them unto adoption
as His sons through Christ.

Either, therefore, a man is elect, of the number of those who are so since before the world’s
foundation, and can by no means fall from his election in which case he has therefore no need of
prayer; or he is not elect nor yet preordained, in which case he prays in vain, since, though he should
pray ten thousand times, he will not be listened to. For whom God foreknew, them He also
preordained to conformity with the image of His Son’s glory; and whom He preordained, them He
also called; and whom He called, them He also justified; and whom He justified, them He also
glorified.

Why is Josiah distressed, or why has he anxiety as to whether or not he will be listened to in prayer,
when, many generations before, he was prophesied by name and his future action not only foreknown
but foretold in the hearing of many. To what purpose, too, does Judas pray with the result that even
his prayer turned to sin, when from David’s times it is pre-announced that he will lose his
overseership, another receiving it in his stead.

It is self-evidently absurd, God being unchangeable and having pre-comprehended all things and
adhering to His prearrangements, to pray in the belief that through prayer one will change His
purpose, or, as though He had not already prearranged but awaited each individual’s prayer, to
make intercession that He may arrange what suits the supplicant by reason of his prayer, there and
then appointing what He approves as reasonable though He has previously not contemplated it. At
this point the propositions you formulated in your letter to me may be set down word for word thus:
Firstly, if God is foreknower of the future and it must come to pass, prayer is vain. Secondly, if all
things come to pass by virtue of God’s will, and His decrees are fixed, and nothing that He wills
can be changed, prayer is vain. Towards a solution of the difficulties which benumb the instinct of
prayer, the following, as I believe, helpful considerations may be advanced.

See the book 'Spiritual Christianity for Today! by Rev. Fr. Michael here:  http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009ZCIF4M

Origen on Prayer Chapter Two

Origen on Prayer Origen

CHAPTER II

SCRIPTURAL USES OF THE GENERAL WORDS FOR PRAYER

So far as I have observed, the first instance of the term prayer that I find is when Jacob, a fugitive
from his brother Esau’s wrath, was on his way to Mesopotamia at the suggestion of Isaac and
Rebecca. The passage runs: And Jacob vowed a vow (prayed a prayer), saying—If the Lord God
will be with me, and guard me in this way that I am going, and give me bread to eat and raiment
to put on, and bring me back in safety to my father’s house, then shall the Lord be my God and this
stone which I have set up as a pillar shall be for me God’s house, and of all that you will give me
I will give you tithe.

It should also to be remarked that the term prayer is in many places is different from prayer as we
speak of it—as when applied in the case of one who professes that he will do certain things in
exchange for obtaining certain other things from God. The expression prayer is, however, employed
in our usual sense [in early texts]. Thus in Exodus after the scourge of frogs, the second in order
of the ten, “Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron and said to them: Pray unto the Lord for me that
He withdraw the frogs from me and from my people; and I will send the people forth that they may
sacrifice to the Lord.”

And if, because Pharaoh’s word is aw-thar’ anyone should be sceptical as to aw-thar’ meaning here
prayer as well as vow, he should observe what follows: “Moses said to Pharaoh, ‘Kindly tell me
when I am to pray (aw-thar’) for you and for your officials and for your people, that the frogs may
be removed from you and your houses and be left only in the Nile.’” In the case of the fleas, the
third scourge, I have observed that neither does Pharaoh entreat that prayer be made nor does Moses
pray. In the case of the flies, the fourth, he says: Pray therefore unto the Lord for me.
Then Moses also said: I will go out from you and pray unto God and the flies shall go away from
Pharaoh and his servants and his people tomorrow. And shortly after: So Moses went out from
Pharaoh and prayed unto God. Again in the case of the fifth and the sixth scourge neither did
Pharaoh entreat that prayer should be made nor did Moses pray, but in the case of the seventh
Pharaoh sent and called for Moses and Aaron and said to them: I have sinned this time; the Lord
is righteous, I and my people are impious. Therefore pray unto the Lord that there be an end of
thunder and hail and fire. And shortly after: Moses went out from Pharaoh outside the city, and
stretched forth his hands unto the Lord and there was an end to the thunder. Why is it not as in the
foregoing cases?

And he prayed, but he stretched forth his hands unto the Lord. That is a question to be considered
more conveniently elsewhere. In the case of the eighth scourge, however, Pharaoh says . . . and
pray (aw-thar’) to the LORD your God that at the least he remove this deadly thing from me.” So
Moses went out from Pharaoh and prayed (aw-thar’) unto God. We said that the term prayer
(aw-thar’) is, as in Jacob’s case, in many places employed in a sense other than the customary. In
Leviticus for instance: The Lord spoke to Moses saying: Speak to the children of Israel; and you
shall say unto them:

Whoever vows (naw-dar’) a vow (neh’-der), setting a price upon his soul to the Lord, his price, if
a male from twenty to sixty years, shall be fifty didrachims of silver, sanctuary standard. And in
Numbers: And the Lord spoke to Moses saying: Speak to the Children of Israel; and you shall say
unto them: Man or woman, whoever vows (naw-dar’) a great vow of consecration to the Lord, shall
be consecrate from wine and strong drink—and so on of the so-called Nazarite; then, shortly after:
and shall hallow his head in that day in which he was hallowed to the Lord for the days of the vow.
And again shortly after: This is the law for him that has vowed when he shall have fulfilled the
days of his vow . . . ; and again shortly after: And after that, he that has vowed will drink wine.
This is the law for him that has vowed, whoever has vowed his votive gift to the Lord, apart from
what his hand may find by virtue of his vow which he has vowed according to the law of
consecration. And towards the end of Numbers: And Moses spoke to the rulers of the tribes of the
Children of Israel saying, This is the thing which the Lord has decreed: A man who has vowed a
vow to the Lord or sworn an oath or entered a bond, on his soul shall not desecrate his word: all
that has gone out of his mouth shall he do.

And if a woman has vowed a vow to the Lord or entered a bond in the house of her father in her
youth, and her father has heard her vows and her bonds that she entered into against her soul, and
her father has let them pass in silence, all her vows shall stand, and her bonds that she entered into
against her soul shall remain: after which he lays down sundry other laws for such a woman. In
this sense it is written in Proverbs: [I have a peace offering: today I pay my vows; and a foolish
son is a father’s shame: unhallowed are vows from a harlot’s hire; and] it is a snare to a man to
hallow hastily anything of his own: for after vowing comes repenting.
And in Ecclesiastes: Better not vow than vow without paying; and in the Acts of the Apostles:
There are among us four men of their own accord under a vow. I thought it not out of place first to
distinguish the meaning of prayer (aw-thar’) in its two senses, and similarly of prayer (neh’-der),
for the latter turn in addition to its common and customary general usage, is also employed, in the
sense which we are accustomed to attach to vow in what is told of Hannah in the first book of
Samuel: Now Eli the priest was sitting on a seat at the doorway of the temple of the Lord.
And she was in bitterness of soul and prayed (paw-lal’) unto the Lord and wept sore. And she
vowed (naw-dar’) a vow (neh’-der) and said: O Lord of hosts, if you will indeed look on the
humiliation of your bondwoman and remember me and forget not your bondwoman and will give
to your bondwoman male seed, then will I give him in gift to the Lord all the days of his life, and
no razor shall come upon his head. And yet in this instance, one may, not without plausibility, with
special regard to the words “she prayed (paw-lal’) unto the Lord,.” “and she vowed a vow,.” Ask
whether, as she has done both of two things, that is “prayed unto the Lord” “and vowed a vow,.”
the word prayed ( paw-lal’) on the one hand is not employed in our customary signification of
prayer (aw-thar’), and “vowed a vow” on the other hand in the sense in which it is employed in
Leviticus and Numbers.

For “I will give him in gift to the Lord all the days of his life, and no razor shall come upon his
head” is strictly not a prayer but such a vow as Jephthah also vowed in the passage; and Jephthah
vowed a vow to the Lord and said: If you will indeed deliver the children of Ammon into my hand,
then it shall be that whoever comes out of the doors of my house to meet me on my return in peace
from the Children of Ammon shall be the Lord’s and I will offer him up as a burnt offering.

See the book 'Spiritual Christianity for Today! by Rev. Fr. Michael here:  http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009ZCIF4M

Origen on Prayer, Chapter One Introduction

Origen on Prayer Origen  CHAPTER ONE  INTRODUCTION
Things in themselves so supremely great, so far above man, so utterly above our perishable nature, as to be impossible for the race of rational mortals to grasp, as the will of God became possible in the immeasurable abundance of the Divine grace which streams forth from God upon men, through Jesus Christ the minister of His unsurpassable grace toward us, and through the cooperant Spirit.
Thus, though it is a standing impossibility for human nature to acquire Wisdom, by which all things have been established—for all things, according to David, God made in wisdom—from being impossible it becomes possible through our Lord Jesus Christ, who was made for us wisdom from God and righteousness and sanctification and redemption. For what or who is man that he shall know the counsel of God, or who shall conceive what that Lord willeth? Since the thoughts of mortals are weakling and our purposes are prone to fail; for the body that is corruptible weighs down soul, and mind with its store of thought is burdened by it’s earthly tabernacle; and things on earth we forecast with difficulty, but things in heaven whoever
yet traced out? Who would not say that it is impossible for man to trace out things in heaven?


Yet this impossible thing, by the surpassing grace of God, becomes possible; for he who was caught up unto a third heaven traced out things in the three heavens through having heard unutterable utterances which it was not permitted for man to speak. Who can say that it is possible for the mind
of the Lord to be known by man?
But this, too, God graciously gives through Christ who said to His disciples: “No longer do I call you servants, because the servant knows not what his lord’s will is, but I have called you friends, because all the things that I have heard from my Father I have made known to you; so that through Christ there is made known to them the will of one who, when He teaches them the will of the Lord, has no desire to be their lord any longer but instead becomes a friend to those whose lord he was before.” Moreover, as no one knows the things of man save the Spirit of man that is in him, so also no one knows the things of God save the Spirit of God.

Now if no one knows the things of God save the Spirit of God, it is impossible that a man should know the things of God. But mark how this too becomes possible: but we, he says, have received not the spirit of the world but the spirit which is from God, that we may know the things graciously given to us by God, and these also we speak not in words taught of human wisdom but in those taught of the Spirit. But I think, right pious and industrious Ambrosius, and right discreet and manful Tatiana, from whom I avow that womanly weakness has disappeared as truly as it had from Sarah of old, you are wondering to what purpose all this has been said in preface about things impossible for man becoming possible by the grace of God, when the subject prescribed for our discourse is prayer.

The fact is, I believe it to be itself one of those things which, judged by our weakness, are impossible, clearly to set forth with accuracy and reverence a complete account of prayer, and in particular of how prayer ought to be offered, what ought to be said to God in prayer, which seasons are more, which less, suitable for prayer . . . The very apostle who by reason of the abundance of the revelations is anxious that no one should account to him more than he sees or hears from him, confesses that he knows not how to pray as he ought, for what we ought to pray, he says, we know not how to as we ought. It is necessary not merely to pray but also to pray as we ought and to pray what we ought.
For even though we are enabled to understand what we ought to pray, that is not adequate if we do not add to it the right manner also. On the other hand what is the use of the right manner to us if we do not know to pray for what we
ought? Of these two things the one, I mean the ‘what we ought’ of prayer, is the language of the prayer, while the ‘as we ought’ is the disposition of him who prays. Thus the former is illustrated by “Ask for the great things and the little shall be added unto you,.” and “Ask for the heavenly things and the earthly shall be added unto you,.” and “Pray for them that abuse you,.” and “Entreat therefore the Lord of the harvest that He send out workers unto his harvest,.” and “Pray that you enter not into temptation,.” and “Pray that your flight be not in winter or on a Sabbath,.” and “In praying babble not” and the like passages: the latter by “I desire therefore that men pray in ever place lifting up holy hands without anger and questioning, and in like manner that women array themselves decently in simplicity, with modesty and discretion, not in or gold or pearls or costly raiments, but, as becomes women of pious profession, through good works.


Instructive too, for prayer ‘as we ought’ is the passage: “If then you art offering your gift at the altar and there think you that your brother hath aught against you, leave there your gift before the altar, and go back—first be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift;” for what greater gift can be sent up to God from a rational creature than fragrant words of prayer that is offered from a conscience devoid of taint from Sin? Similarly instructive is “Deprive not one another, save by agreement for a season that you may give yourselves to prayer and may be together at another time again, in order that Satan may not have occasion to
exalt over you by reason of your incontinence.


For prayer ‘as we ought’ is restrained unless the marriage mysteries which claim our silence be consummated with more of solemnity and deliberation and less of passion, the ‘agreement’ referred to in the passage obliterating the discord of passion, and destroying incontinence, and preventing
Satan’s malicious exultation. Yet again instructive for prayer ‘as we ought’ is the passage: “If you are standing at prayer, forgive aught that you have against any man;” and also the passage in Paul “Any man who prays or preaches with covered head dishonours his head, and any woman who prays or preaches with unveiled head dishonors her head” is descriptive of the right manner of prayer.

Paul knows all these sayings, and could cite, with subtle statement in each case, manifold more from law and prophets and gospel fulfillment, but in the moderation, yes, and in the truthfulness of his nature, and because he sees how much, after all of them, is lacking to knowledge of the right way to pray what he ought, he says “but what we ought to pray we know not how to as we ought,.” and adds thereto the source from which a man’s deficiency is made up if though ignorant he has
rendered himself worthy to have the deficiency made up within him: 

“The Spirit himself more than intercedes with God in sighs unspeakable and He that searches hearts knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because His intercession on behalf of saints is according to God.” Thus the Spirit who cries “Abba Father” in the hearts of the blessed, knowing with solicitude that their sighing in this tabernacle can but weigh down the already fallen or transgressors, “more than intercedes with God in sighs unspeakable,.” for the great love and sympathy He feels for men taking our sighs upon himself; and, by virtue of the wisdom that resides in Him, beholding our Soul humbled ‘unto dust’ and shut within the body ‘of humiliation,’ He employs no common sighs when He more than intercedes with God but unspeakable ones akin to the unutterable words which a man
may not speak.

Not content to intercede with God, this Spirit intensifies His intercession, “more than intercedes,.” for those who more than conquer, as I believe such as Paul was, who says “Nay in all these we more than conquer.” He simply “intercedes,.” I think, not for those who more than conquer, nor again for those who are conquered, but for those who conquer. Akin to the saying “what we ought to pray we know not how to as we ought, but the Spirit more than intercedes with God in sighs unspeakable,.” is the passage “I will pray with the Spirit, and I will pray with the understanding also: I will sing with the spirit; and I will sing with the understanding also.”

For even our understanding is unable to pray unless the spirit leads it in prayer within hearing of it as it were, anymore than it can sing or hymn, with rhythmic cadence and in unison, with true measure and in harmony, the Father in Christ, unless the Spirit who searches all things even the depth of God first praise and hymn Him whose depth He has searched and, as He had the power, comprehended. I think it must have been the awakened consciousness of human weakness falling short of prayer in the right way, above all realized as he listened to great words of intimate knowledge falling from the Savior’s lips in prayer to the Father, that moved one of the disciples of Jesus to say to the Lord when He ceased praying, “Lord, teach us to pray, even as John also taught his disciples.” The whole train of language is as follows:

“And it came to pass, as He was at prayer in a certain place, that one of His disciples said to Him when He ceased “Lord, teach us to pray even as John also taught his disciples.”
For is it conceivable that a man who had been brought up under instruction in the law and hearing of the words of the prophets and was no stranger to the synagogue had no knowledge whatsoever of prayer until he saw the Lord praying in a certain place? It is absurd to pretend that he was one
who did pray after the Jewish practice but saw that he needed fuller knowledge as to the place in reference to prayer. What was it, too, in reference to prayer that John used to teach the disciples who came to him for baptism from Jerusalem and all Judea and the country round about, but certain things of which, as one who was greater than a prophet, he had vision in reference to prayer, which I believe he would not deliver to all who were baptized but privately to those who were disciples
with a view to baptism?

Such are the prayers, which are really spiritual because the spirit was praying in the heart of the saints, recorded in scripture, and they are full of unutterably wonderful declarations. In the first book of Kings there is the prayer of Hannah, partially, because the whole of it was not committed
to writing since she was ‘speaking in her heart’ when she perservered in prayer before the Lord; and in Psalms, the seventeenth psalm is entitled “A prayer of David,.” and the ninetieth “A prayer of Moses, man of God,.” and the hundred and second “A prayer of a poor man at a time he is weary
and pours forth his supplication before the Lord.”

These are prayers which, because truly prayers made and spoken with the spirit, are also full of the declarations of the wisdom of God, so that one may say of the truths they proclaim “Who is wise that he shall understand them? And understanding, then he shall fully know them.” Since therefore
it is so great an undertaking to write about prayer, in order to think and speak worthily of so great a subject, we need the special illumination of the Father, and the teaching of the first born Word himself, and the inward working of the Spirit, I pray as a man—for I by no means attribute to myself any capacity for prayer—that I may obtain the Spirit of prayer before I discourse upon it, and I entreat that a discourse full and spiritual may be granted to us and that the prayers recorded in the Gospels may be elucidated.

So let us now begin our discourse on Prayer.

See the book Spiritual Christianity for Today by Rev. Fr. Michael here: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009ZCIF4M












Saturday, March 9, 2013

Being One with Jesus the Christ


Being one with Jesus the Christ

March 10, 2013

Rev. Fr. Michael

My friends, how truly blessed we are to have been called by Jesus the Christ to become one with Him and in turn one with Almighty God through Him. This of course does not mean that we will be God in any way but one as in being spiritually connected to Jesus and living eternally in the Light and energies of Almighty God.

But we must stop and reflect on how we are to achieve this oneness with Jesus Christ and in turn make this our life’s passion.  Many are already aware of how to achieve this but for one reason or another each of us continues to fall short. We can be so easily distracted by life itself in this world and forget who it is we represent at any given moment. Quite often we blame the world itself with its many pleasures and distractions but consider this; “A brother did wrong one time at Scetis and when a council was called about it, they sent for Abba Moses, but he refused to come. So the priest sent someone to him, saying, ‘Come, the community is waiting for you.’  He got up and went and, picking up a large basket with a hole in the bottom, filled it with sand and carried it with him. When he arrived at the meeting, those who came out to meet him said to him, ‘what’s this, father?’ The old man said, ‘My sins trickle out behind me and I do not see them and yet I have come today to judge someone else’s sins.’
When they heard this, they did not say anything to condemn the brother but forgave him.”

Abba Moses lived in the Egyptian desert, a monk in the fourth century, where were the worldly distractions and pleasures which would have made him sin? He had none of these things. Sadly we just simply sin whether it be in thought, word, or deed; we just simply sin. We know that sin separates us from the love of God; we know that we have a mediator between us and God and that is Jesus the Christ but what does this mean? Can we just simply sin, knowing that Jesus intercedes for us? Heaven forbid that this thought even enters into our mind. So if we sin what are we to do, how can we be one with Jesus the Christ when even daily we sin? We all know the answers to this question but yet we all neglect the very things that are necessary for us to do on a daily basis somehow at one time or another. We can sin in doing, speaking, or thinking wrong and/or we sin when we neglect to do something that we should do.

How is it that we become one with Jesus Christ? For one, what did Jesus say? If you love me, keep my commandments, how is it that we can keep the commandments when we sin daily? Being one with Jesus would mean that we are full of the love of God, having the fullness of God’s love in us is the ecstasy of life, in the Psalms we read; Thou annointest my head with oil, my cup runneth over; when we are anointed by God and begin to be filled with the Spirit, the love of God begins to fill us, we could be so filled with God’s love that it would be overflowing. It would not be possible for the flesh to take on the fullness of the love of God because the flesh as it stands currently could never contain it, we would be physically overwhelmed and yet we could contain more than we do now if we would only be complete in other things but again in the flesh we are restricted. In seeking the love of God we must become ever more humble; the greater thou art, the more humble thyself in all things, and thou shalt find grace before God. This is a great key to receiving grace and the love of God, humbleness and yet in being humble we find even more difficulty, humbleness has an enemy and that enemy is pride. This is what we must seek out and purge from our heart, pride is the most subtle of sin and it lurks deep in the heart of all of us. Pride is at the root of many sins; because of pride we become angry when someone insults us and we may well carry out some other sin because of our anger, we work to control our anger but never look beyond it to see the pride. We are proud of our knowledge whether it is secular or religious and will mock those who somehow lack our knowledge whether it is in person or private conversation with another; pride in our knowledge also hinders this knowledge from sinking into our heart.

 Pride in our accomplishments causes envy when we see others who have accomplished more which also leads to lust. We know to control envy and lust but we do not look beyond that to the pride. Pride runs to the very depths of our heart, pride prevents the love of God from filling us to the fullness because pride will not allow us to reach the depths of humbleness.

From  pride we find arrogance, strife, and gossip; even if they are only fleeting thoughts because we have learned to control them, their very existence prevents complete humbleness and the complete infilling of the Most Holy Spirit. It is on our knees in humble prayer before God that we can overcome. This can be explained in this way; Amen I say to you, there hath not risen among them that are born of women a greater than John the Baptist: yet he that is the lesser in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he. And from the days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and the violent bear it away. What spiritual meaning can we find in this scripture?

And he spoke also a parable to them, that we ought always to pray, and not to faint, saying: There was a judge in a certain city, who feared not God, nor regarded man.  And there was a certain widow in that city, and she came to him, saying: avenge me of my adversary. And he would not for a long time. But afterwards he said within himself: Although I fear not God, nor regard man, yet because this widow is troublesome to me, I will avenge her, lest continually coming she weary me.

And in another place; And when he heard the multitude passing by, he asked what this meant. And they told him, that Jesus of Nazareth was passing by. And he cried out, saying: Jesus, son of David, have mercy on me. And they that went before, rebuked him, that he should hold his peace: but he cried out much more: Son of David, have mercy on me. And Jesus standing, commanded him to be brought unto him. And when he was come near, he asked him,

Saying: What wilt thou that I do to thee? But he said: Lord that I may see. And Jesus said to him: Receive thy sight: thy faith hath made thee whole. And immediately he saw, and followed him, glorifying God. And all the people, when they saw it, gave praise to God.

So what have these to do with one another? We ought always to pray and not faint as the widow finally received her hearing before the judge, as the blind man who refused to cease calling on the Son of David who also received his answer. We are to never stop calling on Almighty God, ask and you shall receive, seek and you shall find, knock and the door will be opened, this is to be done without ceasing, this is the violence spoken of that will bear heaven away, the unceasing cry unto Almighty God in complete humbleness in accordance with God’s will and yet there is another obstacle in the way of humbleness; confession and repentance.

Without confession and repentance we will never rid ourselves of the pride that stands in the way of humbleness which is necessary in order to be filled with the Most Holy Spirit, the love of Almighty God will never be able to infill us without confession and repentance which will lead us to the humbleness which in turn will allow us to be filled, there is no other way.

I pray in tears that in the days that we are facing ahead, these things will become the life of everyone who calls on the name of Jesus the Christ. May all who call on His Most Holy Name be blessed.

May Almighty God have mercy on us all.

In Christ,

Rev. Fr. Michael  

 

 

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

As Rome begins the season of Lent, the Pope; Pope Benedict XVI has already announced that he will be stepping down. Needless to say there has been a flurry of excitement, shock, discussion on the reason and meaning for this resignation and of course the prophets are out and about. This will be a short blog and it relates to the prophets, most of them appear to be languishing at the thought that the Roman church will now become a bastion of liberality, this is of course welcomed by those who want the modernized liberal Catholic church so that they no longer have to be accused of living sinful lives  and can do whatever it is that they choose to do.

Others who are languishing over this idea of a liberal Catholic church are doing so because they have been pointing their fingers at the Popes and accusing them of being the Antichrist and/or the leader of the One World Church. This liberalization of the church will only prove that hey are right. Others are actually predicting the collapse of the Roman church and are looking forward to it. This is coming from those who claim that they are Christian. I find this to be amazing. I have been writing for quite a long time on the role of Rome in Christianity. Although there are differences between Roman and Orthodox understandings, Rome is from the beginning. I am amazed at those who are actually looking forward to the demise of Roman Catholicism.

I would really like to know how it is that if Rome were headed by the Antichrist at a time when the world has completely rejected Jesus Christ in all of the world governments, why are they leading the church against the attacks of governments on abortion, why do they speak out so much against human trafficking? Why are they prepared to become imprisoned rather than obey the civil law that goes against the Law of God?

I am going to say this again; if Rome were to fall, so will the rest of Christianity, all true Christians will become open targets, only those who become churches of the state will survive unscathed by civil authorities. These groups will not be preaching the Christ, the world will be dark and yet it will believe that it is light. Jesus Christ said that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against His church, to attack His church is pitting you against Jesus Christ. So many attack me for these words but I tell you the truth, if Rome falls you who attack will be forced into a decision, accept civil law and preach that which is against Jesus or be persecuted, you will then see the truth of my statements.

Also I tell you the truth, when Rome goes, it marks the end. Many predictions about a Black Pope and a Pope who will usher in a new order are running rampant right now. Prophecy regarding the end times and the destruction of the church does not mean that it happens because the Pope is Antichrist, why would the world level the church of the Antichrist? Everyone who is so against the Pope with the hatred that I see and hear from them truly needs to reflect on these things. If the world wants to rid itself of Rome, how could Rome be Antichrist?

Reflect on this because if what you wish were to actually come, it will be the end of you as well and the sad part is that if you have not repented before your personal fall I can only say this; may Almighty God have mercy on your soul. You must stop this prophesying and wait to see the truth, do not pit yourself against Jesus the Christ, have patience and wait on the Lord.

In Christ,
Monk Michael
Rev. Fr. Michael Valentine

Repent, Confess, Repent!

 

Friday, February 8, 2013

Create in me a pure heart; The Great Lent 2013

My Friends, all who truly love Jesus Christ;

Soon we will be participating in Great Lent. There is so much going on that we cannot even pretend that 'all is right in the world'. The Lenten Season is a time of fasting, cleansing and purifying, it is also a time for reflection and meditation and growing in spirit. It is a time to pray for renewal. For many years I have been talking about the purging of the church, so many refuse to listen. So many are waiting for the end and some crazy rapture of Christians, the times are constantly predicted, the Antichrist is named over and over as well as the leader of the 'One World Church'. There is so much division in the church if our Lord Jesus Christ was not truly God I think that he would have abandoned us centuries ago. The persecution of the church has never truly stopped and this occurs from without and from within.

As the world continues to change and more pressure is put onto Christianity to change with it I believe that there will be a great purging within. If the church maintains her Christian roots and continues to uphold the truth, many will protest, fight within, and ultimately leave. As the persecution continues many true Christians will be persecuted, imprisoned and very possibly killed but I believe that much death will not come from just the law but from those who make some claim to Christ who are truly followers of that evil one who will be doing much of the killing. The church will ultimately become one group of believers working together, this of course is fought against and argued about but in the last days this will become so.

Currently we are fighting still against abortion, fighting against the destruction of family and marriage, fighting against the adoption of children to same sex couples, fighting against human trafficking and sex slavery, fighting against the society that would teach our children that which is against Almighty God. All governments of this world are fully aware of all of these fights and ills in the world, they encourage these things, those who fight against them will become outcasts of society, considered to be a cancer to 'humanity', unsocial, unbending, lacking tolerance and intolerable and yet there is hope!

I have seen angels of God intervene at the last moment, during the blink of an eye when death seemed eminent they come and then they disappear just as quickly, I have seen the Holy Mother, I have seen situations turn when there appeared to be no hope. My friends, we must have a pure love in our heart, this is the only way. The Psalmist says; create in me a pure heart and a steadfast spirit. This must be our goal for it is with a pure heart that we must pray, during this Great Lent this is what we must strive for, prayer from a pure heart and a steadfast spirit. Confess, Repent, become one with the Christ. Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal; have mercy on us. Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal; have mercy on us. Holy God, Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal; have mercy on us.

We must stand in faith.

In Christ,
Monk Michael

Sunday, January 6, 2013

May you be blessed in 2013

January 2013, a new year was celebrated world wide. The news media loves to broadcast these things and the people love to watch the different ways in which the new year is celebrated. More people celebrate the new year than who celebrate the resurrection of our Lord and Savior; Jesus the Christ. It seems as though people care less and less for truth and morality and prefer to chase after what they want the truth to be. Morality throughout the world is absolutely disgusting, governments are corrupt regardless of which country they claim to represent. They do not represent anyone except themselves, lust for power and control over the world population is the only thing that they recognize.

I do not apologize for any of the words that I have placed above, there is only one government that is truly for the people and that is the government of the Lord Jesus the Christ. No government of man is willing to lay down it's life for the people but it is more than willing to lay down the people's lives to keep itself alive. I pray that everyone throughout the world will consider this fact and begin to recognize the government of Jesus the Christ who is the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and who is the only King and Lord that began His government by surrendering His life for the people.

Consider this and be careful not to follow anyone simply because they say 'Lord' and preach 'Jesus' from a stage. Beware of charlatans; prosperity preachers  and faith healers abound and they prey on those who desperately seek the kingdom and healing. Consider that one who can truly heal would be out in the hospitals actually healing the sick. To heal would be truly a gift from Almighty God Himself and would only be granted to one who was truly dwelling within Almighty God and Almighty God truly dwelling within him. This one would not be requiring a donation in order for someone to be healed but would be working from the heart.

Any others are charlatans and are stealing your money while seeking riches. While this message may seem to be a harsh new year's message to many, it is meant to be a warning to seek only the truth and not fall prey to the many who seek a comfortable living from those who are desparately seeking answers.

May Almighty God bless you with truth, peace and grace in this new year. Seek truth, seek wisdom, seek Almighty God first.

In Christ,

Monk Michael

michael.monkmichael@gmail.com