ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY Orthodox Calendar
Orthodox Calendar 2022
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Успение Божией Матери
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August 15
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August 28
11th Sunday after Pentecost. Tone 2.
No fast.

Совершается служба великому праздникуThe Dormition of Our Most Holy Lady the Theotokos and Ever-Virgin Mary.

Repose of St. Macarius the Roman, monastic founder (Novgorod) (1550). St. Stephen, elder, of Vyatka (1890). Synaxis of the Saints of Kemerovo.

Icons of the Most Holy Theotokos “Diasozousa” and “Chajnicke.”

New Hieromartyr Christos, hieromonk, of Ioannina (ca. 1770). New Hieromartyr Paul Szwajko, priest, and New Martyr Joanna, presbytera, of Graboviec (Chelm and Podlasie, Poland) (1943).

Repose of Elder Anthony of Murom (Arsenius in schema) (1851), friend of St. Seraphim of Sarov; Archimandrite Hieron, founder of New Athos (1912), Abbess Rufina of Harbin and Shanghai (1937), and Metropolitan Augustinos (Kantiotis) of Florina (2010).

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

Eleventh Sunday After Pentecost. [I Cor. 9:2-12; Matt. 18:23-35]

   The Lord concluded the parable about the two debtors with the following words: So likewise shall My Heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses. It would seem that such a small thing is needed: forgive and you will be forgiven. When you are forgiven, you are brought into mercy; and when you are brought into mercy, you have become a participant in all the treasures of mercy. So here is salvation, and paradise, and eternal bliss. What a great acquisition for such a small thing as forgiving!…Yes, it is a small thing, but for our self-love there is nothing more difficult than to forgive. We still perhaps forgive some unintentional annoyance dealt us in private so that nobody sees; but if it is just a bit more sensitive, and in front of people, do not even ask—no forgiveness. There are circumstances when whether you want to or not, you are not allowed to express your displeasure—and so you remain silent. However, only your tongue is silent—meanwhile your heart speaks and builds evil plans. Raise the annoyance yet another degree—and there is no restraint. Neither shame, nor fear, nor loss, nor any other thing will restrain you. Egoism which has reached the boiling point makes a person as though insane, and he who gives in to it begins to talk foolishness. The people most subject to this misfortunate state are usually not just anybody—the more civilized one is, the more sensitive he is to insults, and the less forgiving. Relations will often remain smooth on the surface, but inwardly there is clearly discord. Meanwhile, the Lord requires that we forgive with our whole heart.

Thirteenth Sunday After Pentecost. [I Cor. 16:13-24; Matt. 21:33-42]

   Mary hath chosen that good part (Luke 10:42). The Dormition of the Mother of God represents a good end to such a choice. The Saviour Himself received her soul in His arms at her Dormition. Many saints were made worthy of the same. In various ways and degrees, all those who choose that good part meet with this. At the time this choice is made, the saints foresaw this end through hope, and even felt it to a certain degree; but then come labours, struggle and forcing oneself, shrouding the chosen path. The good end of that good part remains as a guiding star. It is as a faraway shining light for a traveller who is overtaken by darkness. Hope is the stimulator of energy and the maintainer of patience and constancy in what was begun, while hope itself is strong through faith. People make their choice according to faith, and through hope they are firm in their choice; while through patience they attain that good end.

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