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99 episodes
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Give Me A Word St. Vladimir's Seminary, and Ancient Faith Ministries
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- Religion & Spirituality
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5.0 • 4 Ratings
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A collection of daily and weekly homilies from the seminarians, faculty, and honored guests of St. Vladimir's Seminary - straight from the ambo of Three Hierarch's Chapel.
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Bearers of Courage and Love
The tomb was blocked. Roman guards stood watch, armed and vigilant. Yet, in spite of the very real risk of danger and personal suffering that could await them, a group of women disciples went ahead anyway, determined to anoint the body of their Lord and Master. Why? On this Third Sunday of Pascha, The Very Rev. Prot. Vincent Temirov speaks to the motivations of the Holy Myrrhbearing Women—those women who would become the first witnesses of Jesus' resurrection and the first to proclaim to the world "Christ is risen!"
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A Christian Response to Achievement and Failure
Nothing is more natural to the fallen mind than to be delighted with praise and one’s own achievement, and likewise to be frustrated and embarrassed by criticism and failure. But the examples of our Lord and His apostles tell us they were not beholden to anyone or anything in this world. Our struggle to become like them, and to take steps toward true victory over our fallen nature and true freedom in Christ, must begin today. At the Divine Liturgy, ahead of St Vladimir’s Seminary’s 2024 Commencement Exercises, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon offered sage counsel to graduating seminarians, families, and friends.
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Believing in Christ that We Might Have Life in His Name
As we continue to celebrate the most glorious Pascha of our Lord, says the Very Rev. Dr Alexander Rentel, we must remind ourselves how difficult it must have been for His disciples immediately after His crucifixion. There was fear, doubt, and extreme discouragement. This is what made their joy all the more exuberant and full when the Lord appeared to them through locked doors as they prayed in hiding. For Thomas, as well as for the other disciples, witnessing the Lord in His resurrected form enabled them to finally understand the entirety of His teaching and saving work here on earth.
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Partaking in the Lord’s Mystical Supper
In this homily on Holy Thursday, the Very Rev. Dr Bogdan Bucur invites us to consider the establishment of the Holy Eucharist as a sacrament and God’s core invitation to us to partake in His life. Fr Bogdan draws on the many Scripture readings of Holy Week to emphasize both the characters who heeded God’s invitation to Himself (e.g. the woman who anointed Jesus’ feet, the prophet Job) and the many ways in which the Lord has invited us to draw near to Him throughout the Scriptures (e.g. the Hebrew people’s Exodus into the wilderness, Moses’ encounter with God on Mt Sinai). Fr Bogdan also urges us to consider our own similarities to the scriptural characters who rejected God’s invitation to Himself, especially Judas and the Jews who murmured against God in the desert. Through honest self-evaluation and repentance, we can accept the Lord’s invitation and truly draw near and partake in Life.
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Looking Beyond the Raising of Lazarus
In the wake of an untimely death in the seminary community, the Very Rev. Dr Bogdan Bucur asks all the questions of the grieving person, of Martha and Mary at the tomb of Lazarus, of each of us when we encounter the loss of a loved one. Fr Bogdan leads us to see how God Himself mourns and weeps with us, suffers with us in our grief. But it does not end there. He, the Eternal God, has come to experience our mortal life and to bear with us even unto death, and then–He transforms it all, He defeats the power of death which has kept all mankind captive, and brings us new life, everlasting life that is beyond anything we have experienced in this fallen world. This is the hope we have as Christians, as we journey towards the Lord’s Holy Pascha.
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Let Us Crucify Our Minds with Christ
Drawing on the gospel reading for the liturgy of the 5th Sunday of Great Lent, in which our Lord recounts his upcoming sufferings in detail, His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon (OCA) calls upon us to “truly lay aside all earthly cares and crucify our minds with Christ” during this last week of Great Lent, and especially during Holy Week. His Beatitude goes on to point out that “each year Holy Week invites us back into the mystery of Christ, back into the authentic pattern of our life and salvation. We are not learning a new story, we are being called to experience and live more truly the story that has existed since before the beginning of time…If we allow ourselves to be transformed during this coming Holy Week, by the renewing of our minds, then we hope this renewal will remain with us throughout all the days of the coming year, and even into eternity.”
Customer Reviews
Just what the (spiritual) doctor ordered
Great homilies with timely advice on spiritual life!
Definitely recommend for anyone