ORTHODOX CHRISTIANITY Orthodox Calendar
Orthodox Calendar 2022
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Святой князь Игорь Черниговский Феодор Смоленский и чада его Давид и Константин Святой преподобный Алексий Зосимовский.
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Old Style
September 19
Sunday
New Style
October 2
16th Sunday after Pentecost. Sunday after the Exaltation of the Cross. Tone 7.
No fast.

Cовершается служба, не отмеченная в Типиконе никаким знакомMartyrs Trophimus, Sabbatius, and Dorymedon, of Synnada (276-282). Совершается служба со славословиемSt. Theodore, prince of Smolensk and Yaroslavl (1299), and his sons Sts. David (1321) and Constantine (ca. 1322). St. Alexis, hieroschemamonk of Zosima Hermitage (1928).

Martyr Zosimas, hermit, of Cilicia (4th c.). Blessed Igor-George, tonsured Gabriel, great prince of Chernigov and Kiev (1147).

New Hieromartyr Constantine Golubev, priest, of Bogorodsk, and two martyrs with him (1918). New Hieromartyr Nicholas Iskrovsky, archpriest, of Ukraine (1919). New Hieromartyr Nilus Smirnov, archpriest, of Ivanovskoye-na-Lamo (Moscow) (1938).

Hieromartyrs Januarius, bishop of Benevento, and his companions: Festus, Proclus, and Sosius, deacons; Martyrs Desiderius, reader, and Gantiol, Eutychius, and Acutius, at Pozzuoli (305). St. Seguanus of Gaul (ca. 580). St. Theodore of Tarsus, archbishop of Canterbury (690).

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

The Sixteenth Sunday After Pentecost. [II Cor. 6:1-10; Matt. 25:14-30]

   The parable about the talents offers the thought that life is a time for trading. That means that it is necessary to hasten to use this time as a person would hurry to a market to bargain for what he can. Even if one has only brought bast shoes, or only bast,[1] he does not sit with his arms folded, but contrives to call over buyers to sell what he has and then buy for himself what he needs. No one who has received life from the Lord can say that he does not have a single talent—everyone has something, and not just one thing; everyone, therefore, has something with which to trade and make a profit. Do not look around and calculate what others have received, but take a good look at yourself and determine more precisely what lies in you and what you can gain for that which you have, and then act according to this plan without laziness. At the Judgment you will not be asked why you did not gain ten talents if you had only one, and you will not even be asked why you gained only one talent on your one, but you will be told that you gained a talent, half a talent or a tenth of its worth. And the reward will not be because you received the talents, but because you gained. There will be nothing with which to justify yourself—not with nobleness, nor poverty, nor lack of education. When this is not given, there will be no question about it. But you had hands and feet. You will be asked, what did you gain with them? You had a tongue, what did you gain with it? In this way will the inequalities of earthly states be levelled out at God’s judgment.


[1] Very inexpensive, unsophisticated items.

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