ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY Orthodox Calendar
Orthodox Calendar 2019
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Севастийские мученики. Евстратий, Авксентий, Евгений, Мардарий и Орест Лукия Сиракузская
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Old Style
December 13
Thursday
New Style
December 26
28th Week after Pentecost. Tone 2.
Nativity Fast.
Wine and oil allowed.

Совершается служба с полиелеемMartyrs Eustratius, Auxentius, Eugene, Mardarius, and Orestes, at Sebaste (284-305). Cовершается служба, не отмеченная в Типиконе никаким знакомVirgin-martyr Lucy (Lucia) of Syracuse (304).

St. Arsenius of Mt. Latros (11th c.). St. Arcadius, monk, of Novotorzhok (1077). St. Mardarius, recluse, of the Kiev Caves (13th c.). St. Dositheus, metropolitan of Moldavia (1693).

St. Herman, Wonderworker of Alaska (1836). St. Columba of Terryglass and Holy Island on Lough Derg (Ireland) (549). St. Aubertus, bishop (Neth.) (668). St. Odilia, virgin and abbess, of Alsace (Gaul) (720). St. Gabriel, patriarch of Serbia (1659).

Repose of Schemamonk Panteleimon “the Resurrected,” of Glinsk Hermitage (1895), Blessed Maximus of Ustiug (1906), Bishop Theodore, wonderworker of Trolov Convent in Kiev (1924), Hieromonk Joel of Valaam (1937), and Archimandrite Gerasim Iscu of Tismana Monastery (Romania) (1951).

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

Thursday. [Heb. 10:35-11:7; Mark 9:10-16]

   History flows on and, it seems, inexorably determines individual events. How many preparations there were to receive the Saviour!… At last His closest indicator came, John, but what came of it? With John, They have done…whatsoever they listed, and the Son of Man suffered and was humiliated. The flow of events could not be broken; it took its own. So the flow of history always draws everything after it. People ask, “Where is freedom? What is it, given such an order of events? No more than a phantom.” Thus fatalists usually reason. But this all-determining necessity for the flow of events is only an appearance; in reality all human events, both common and individual, are the fruit of man’s free undertakings. The common [history] flows exactly the way it does because everyone, or a majority of people, want this; and the individual enters into agreement with the common [majority] because one or another in particular wants it. The proof of this is obvious: in the midst of general good there occur bad particulars; and in the midst of general bad there occur good particulars. Also, in the midst of a firmly established commonality are born particulars which, spreading and becoming stronger and stronger, overpower the former commonality and take its place. But these particulars are always a matter of freedom. What in di Christianity have in common with the character of time in which it was conceived? It was sown by several individuals who were not a result of the necessary flow of history; it attracted those who desired it; it spread vigorously and became the general affair of mankind of the time, and yet it was a matter of freedom. Similarly, only in a bad direction—how did the West become corrupted? It corrupted itself: instead of learning from the Gospels they began to learn from pagans and adopt their customs—and they became corrupted. The same will happen with us: we have started to learn from the West which has fallen from Christ the Lord, and have transferred its spirit to ourselves. Finally, like the West, we will renounce true Christianity. But in all of this there is nothing necessarily determining the matter of freedom: if we want to, we will drive away the Western darkness. If we don’t want to, of course, we will submerge ourselves in it.

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