Forefeast of the Nativity of the Theotokos. Martyr Sozon of Cilicia (304). St. John, archbishop and wonderworker, of Novgorod (1186). Hieromartyr Macarius of Kanev, archimandrite, of Obruch and Pinsk (1678). St. Macarius, elder, of Optina Monastery (1860).
Apostles Evodus (Euodias) (66) and Onesiphorus (67), of the Seventy. Martyr Eupsychius of Caesarea in Cappadocia (ca. 130). St. Luke and St. Peter the Cappadocian, abbots, of the monastery of the Deep Stream (10th c.). Sts. Alexander (Peresvet) and Andrew (Oslyabya), disciples of St. Sergius of Radonezh, who fought at the Battle of Kulikovo (1380). St. Serapion of Spaso-Eleazar Monastery, Pskov (1480)
New Hieromartyrs Eugene (Zernov), metropolitan of Nizhni- Novgorod, Leo (Yegorov), archimandrite, of the St. Alexander Nevsky Lavra, Nicholas (Ashchepev), abbot, of the Holy Trinity Selinginsk Monastery, Eugene (Vyzhva), abbot, of Zhitomir (Ukraine), Pachomius (Ionov), hieromonk of the Holy Trinity Skanov Monastery (Penza), and Stephen (Kreidich), priest, of Robchik (Bryansk) (1937). New Hieromartyr John Maslovsky, priest, of Verkhne-Poltavka, Amur (1921).
Sts. Symeon (1476) and Amphilochius (1570), of Pangarati Monastery (Romania). St. Cloud (Clodoald), founder of Nogent-sur-Seine Monastery, near Paris (560). St. Cassia (Cassiana) the Hymnographer (9th c.).
Repose of Metropolitan Isidore (Nikolsky) of St. Petersburg (1892) and Archbishop Anatole (Kamensky) of Irkutsk (1925).
The Fifteenth Sunday After Pentecost. [II Cor. 4:6-15;
Matt. 22:35-46]
The Lord offered the commandment about
love for God and one’s neighbor, and immediately
supplemented it with the teaching about His Sonship to God
and His Divinity. Why was this? Because true love for God
and people is possible no way other than by the influence
of faith in the Divinity of Christ the Saviour, that He is
the incarnate Son of God. Such faith arouses love for God,
for how can one not love God, who has loved us so much,
Who did not even spare His Only-Begotten Son, but gave Him
up for us? Faith brings this love to complete fulfilment,
or to what it seeks; while love seeks a living union. To
attain this union, one must overcome a feeling of
God’s righteousness which punishes sin; without this
it is terrifying to approach God. This feeling is overcome
through the conviction that God’s righteousness is
satisfied by the death on the cross of the Son of God.
Such a conviction comes from faith; consequently, faith
opens the path of love toward God. This is the first
thing. Second: faith in the Divinity of the Son of God Who
was incarnate, suffered, and was buried for our sake,
gives an example of love for one’s neighbor; for
love is when one lays down his soul for his beloved. Faith
also gives strength for the manifestation of such love. To
have such love, one must become a new person instead of an
egotistical person—one must become a
self-sacrificing person. Only in Christ does a person
become a new creature; but we can only be in Christ if we
unite with Christ by faith and grace-filled rebirth
through the holy mysteries accepted with faith. From here
it follows that any expectation by people without faith to
maintain even good moral conduct is in vain. Everything is
together; it is impossible to divide a man. One must
satisfy all of him.
Seventeenth Sunday After Pentecost. Sunday Before the
Elevation of the Cross. [Gal. 6:11-18; John 3:13-17]
As Moses lifted up the serpent in
the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up:
That whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but
have eternal life. Faith in the Son of God, crucified
in the flesh for our sake—is the power of God unto
salvation, the living source of vivifying moral
aspirations and dispositions, and the receptacle of the
abundant grace of the Holy Spirit which abides always in
the heart, and of secret inspirations in good time, at the
hour of need, sent from above. Faith combines one’s
convictions, attracting God’s good will with power
from above. Both of these are what make up the possession
of eternal life. While this life is kept intact, a
Christian is unyielding, because by cleaving to the Lord
he is one in spirit with the Lord, and nothing can
overcome the Lord. Why do people fall? From weakening of
faith. Christian convictions weaken—and moral energy
weakens as well. While this weakening occurs, grace is
crowded out of the heart, and evil urges raise their head.
An inclination toward these urges comes at a convenient
hour, and there is a fall. Be a watchful guardian of the
faith in everything it encompasses, and you will not fall.
In this sense Saint John says that he who is born of God
does not sin.