ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY Orthodox Calendar
Orthodox Calendar 2016
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Old Style
December 17
Friday
New Style
December 30
28th Week after Pentecost. Tone 2.
Рождественский пост.
Monastic rule: cooked food, no oil.

Совершается служба на шестьHoly Prophet Daniel and the Three Holy Youths: Ananias, Azarias, and Misael (600 b.c.).

St. Daniel the Confessor (in schema Stephen), of Spain and Egypt (10th c.). St. Misael, hieromonk of Abalak Monastery (Irkutsk) (1852).

New Hieromartyr Sergius Florinsky, priest, of Rakvere, Estonia (1918).

Monk-martyrs Patermuthius and Coprius and Martyr Alexander the Soldier, of Egypt (361-363). The 47 Martyrs of Gaza at Heraclion (638). St. Sturm, abbot and founder of Fulda Monastery (Germany) (779). Sts. Athanasius, Nicholas, and Anthony, founders of Vatopedi Monastery, Mt. Athos (10th c.). New Martyr Nicetas of Nyssa (ca. 1300). St. Dionysius of Zakynthos, archbishop of Aegina (1622). New Hieromartyrs Paisius, abbot, of Trnava Monastery, Cacak (1814), and Abbacum, deacon (1815), at Belgrade.

Repose of Elder Hadji George of Mt. Athos (1886), Hieroschemamonk Daniel (Sandu Tudor), poet of Romania (1962), and lay elder Panagis of Ilami, Cyprus (1989).

Thoughts for Each Day of the Year
According to the Daily Church Readings from the Word of God
By St. Theophan the Recluse

St. Theophan the Recluse

Friday. [Heb. 11:8, 11-16; Mark 9:33-41]

   The Saviour sets forth a child as a model of faith and life. Simplicity of faith gives birth to simplicity of life; from both of these comes a model moral system. Let philosophizing in here, and it will make disorder within; under the appearance of better arranging affairs, it will throw one’s entire life into disorder. Philosophizing always cries, “This is not so, that is not so; let me establish everything in a new way; the old is worthless, boring.” But it has never yet, in any place, arranged anything good; it only throws things into confusion. The mind should obey what is commanded by the Lord. True, the mind is called “the tsar in the head”; however, this tsar is not given legislative power—only executive power. As soon as it starts making laws, it constructs it knows not what. Moral, religious, worldly, and political orders are thrown into confusion, and everything goes upside down. It is a great misfortune for society when the mind in it is given freedom to soar, with no restraint by Divine truth! This is God’s wrath. About it is said, hide thyself a little for a moment, until the indignation pass away (Isaiah 26:20) During this apogee of mental self-wilfulness it is best to wrap oneself in simplicity of faith. Just as during a storm it is better to sit at home and not step out to fight self-assuredly with it, so during stormy self-mindedness it is better not to step out into battle with it, or to seize the weapon of philosophizing, or resist it. Simplicity of faith is stronger than philosophizing; clothe yourself in it, like in armour, and you will withstand.

Friday. [Heb. 11:8, 11-16; Mark 9:33-41]

   The Saviour sets forth a child as a model of faith and life. Simplicity of faith gives birth to simplicity of life; from both of these comes a model moral system. Let philosophizing in here, and it will make disorder within; under the appearance of better arranging affairs, it will throw one’s entire life into disorder. Philosophizing always cries, “This is not so, that is not so; let me establish everything in a new way; the old is worthless, boring.” But it has never yet, in any place, arranged anything good; it only throws things into confusion. The mind should obey what is commanded by the Lord. True, the mind is called “the tsar in the head”; however, this tsar is not given legislative power—only executive power. As soon as it starts making laws, it constructs it knows not what. Moral, religious, worldly, and political orders are thrown into confusion, and everything goes upside down. It is a great misfortune for society when the mind in it is given freedom to soar, with no restraint by Divine truth! This is God’s wrath. About it is said, hide thyself a little for a moment, until the indignation pass away (Isaiah 26:20) During this apogee of mental self-wilfulness it is best to wrap oneself in simplicity of faith. Just as during a storm it is better to sit at home and not step out to fight self-assuredly with it, so during stormy self-mindedness it is better not to step out into battle with it, or to seize the weapon of philosophizing, or resist it. Simplicity of faith is stronger than philosophizing; clothe yourself in it, like in armour, and you will withstand.

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