Great Lent is the greatest
fasting period in the church year which prepares
Orthodox Christians for the greatest feast of the church
year, "Holy Pascha".
In the Orthodox Church, the last
Sunday before Great Lent - the day on which, at Vespers, Lent is
liturgically announced and inaugurated - is called Forgiveness Sunday. On
the morning of that Sunday, at the Divine Liturgy, we hear the words of
Christ:
"If you forgive men their
trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you, but if you
forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your
trespasses…" (Mark 06:14-15).
Then after Vespers - after hearing the
announcement of Lent in The Great Prokeimenon:
"Turn not away Thy face from
Thy child, for I am afflicted! Hear me speedily! Draw near unto my soul and
deliver it!",
after making our entrance into Lenten worship, with its
special melodies, with the Prayer of St Ephraim the Syrian,
O Lord and Master of my
life take from me the spirit of sloth faint-heartedness, lust of
power and idle talk. But give rather the spirit of chastity,
humility, patience, and love to thy servant.
Yea, O Lord and King grant me to see my own errors
and not to judge my brother; for Thou art blessed unto the ages of
ages.
Amen.
with its
prostrations - we ask forgiveness from each other, we perform the rite of
forgiveness and reconciliation.
It is truly a prayer on which each and every one of us should carefully
mediate, as in many ways it reflects the pattern of our own everyday
lives. Allow the prayer into your heart and mind, meditate upon it, and
it will inevitable speak to you in some way or another. In fact it is a
like a warning to us; we need to spiritually be on our guard, avoiding
the temptations that each day brings, and making amends for our
failings, first by recognizing them, and then bringing them before our
Lord God with humility and contrition. And as we approach each other with words of
reconciliation, the choir intones the Paschal hymns, filling the church with
the anticipation of Paschal joy.
What is the meaning of this rite? Why
is it that the Church wants us to begin the Lenten season with forgiveness
and reconciliation? These questions are in order because for too many people
Lent means primarily, and almost exclusively, a change of diet, the
compliance with ecclesiastical regulations concerning fasting. They
understand fasting as an end in itself, as a "good deed" required by God and
carrying in itself its merit and its reward. But the Church spares no effort
in revealing to us that fasting is but a means, one among many, towards a
higher goal: the spiritual renewal of man, his return to God, true
repentance and, therefore, true reconciliation. The Church spares no effort
in warning us against a hypocritical and pharisaic fasting, against the
reduction of religion to mere external obligations. As a Lenten hymn says:
"In vain do you rejoice in not eating,
O soul! For you abstain from food, But from passions you are not purified.
If you persevere in sin, you will perform a useless fast!"
Now, forgiveness stands at the very
center of Christian faith and of Christian life because Christianity itself
is, above all, the religion of forgiveness. God forgives us, and His
forgiveness is in Christ, His Son, whom He sends to us so that by sharing in
His humanity we may share in His love and be truly reconciled with God.
Indeed, Christianity has no other content but love. And it is primarily the
renewal of that love, a growth in it, that we seek in Great Lent, in fasting
and prayer, in the entire spirit and the entire effort of that season. Thus,
truly forgiveness is both the beginning of, and the proper condition for,
the Lenten season.
One may ask, however: Why should I
perform this rite when I have no "enemies?" Why should I ask forgiveness
from people who have done nothing to me, and whom I hardly know? To ask
these questions is to misunderstand the Orthodox teaching concerning
forgiveness. It is true that open enmity, personal hatred, real animosity
may be absent from our life, though if we experience them, it may be easier
for us to repent, for these feelings openly contradict Divine commandments.
But the Church reveals to us that there are much subtler ways of offending
Divine Love. These are indifference, selfishness, lack of interest in other
people, of any real concern for them - in short, that wall which we usually
erect around ourselves, thinking that by being "polite" and "friendly" we
fulfill God's commandments. The rite of forgiveness is so important
precisely because it makes us realize - be it only for one minute - that our
entire relationship to other men is wrong, makes us experience that
encounter of one child of God with another, of one person created by God
with another, makes us feel that mutual "recognition" which is so terribly
lacking in our cold and dehumanized world.
On that unique evening, listening to
the joyful Paschal hymns we are called to make a spiritual discovery: to
taste of another mode of life and relationship with people, of life whose
essence is love. We can discover that always and everywhere Christ, the
Divine Love Himself, stands in the midst of us, transforming our mutual
alienation into brotherhood. As I advance towards the other, as the other
comes to me - we begin to realize that it is Christ who brings us together
by His love for both of us.
And because we make this discovery -
and because this discovery is that of the Kingdom of God itself: the Kingdom
of Peace and Love, of reconciliation with God and, in Him, with all that
exists - we hear the hymns of that Feast, which once a year "opens to us the
doors of Paradise." We know why we shall fast and pray, what we shall seek
during the long Lenten pilgrimage.
Forgiveness Sunday: the day on which
we acquire the power to make our fasting - true fasting; our effort - true
effort; our reconciliation with God - true reconciliation.
- Father Alexander Schmemann
Orthodox Lent
The Orthodox Christian Lent always begins on the Monday before the Sunday of
Orthodoxy. It is designated as "Clean Monday", the "Monday of cleansing or
purification". On that day Orthodox faithful are required to begin a
spiritual and moral purification through fasting, prayer, meditation,
repentance, attending Lenten religious services and partaking of the
Sacraments of Confession and Communion.
Religious services during the Lenten
period are especially beloved by Orthodox faithful. They include the
Compline, the Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts, the Salutations to the
Virgin Mary and the Divine Liturgy of St. Basil compiled in the 4th Century.
Sunday of Orthodoxy
The historical significance of the Sunday of Orthodoxy dates to 787 A.D.
when the Fathers of the Seventh Ecumenical Council of Nicaea decreed the
restoration of the icons as a means for the spiritual growth and formation
of the Christian ethos and character in the likeness and image of God and
His Saints. In 843 A.D. when the icons were finally restored in the
churches, the first Sunday of Lent was designated as a day for thanksgiving
and doxology. It came to be known as the "Sunday of Orthodoxy", calling the
faithful to a rededication to the Orthodox Christian Faith, as received from
the Apostles. Following the Divine Liturgy, the clergy lead the faithful in
the Procession of Icons and the recitation of The Declaration of Faith.
GREAT LENT AND PASCHA
IN THE ORTHODOX CHURCH 2006
| Great Lent Begins |
March 6
|
Holy Week
(Palm Sunday through Holy Saturday) |
April 16-
April 22 |
| Easter (Pascha) |
April 23 |
| Ascension Day |
June 1 |
| Pentecost
|
June 11 |
The Epistle
Reading is from St. John's First Universal Letter 03:21-24;4:01-11
Beloved, if our hearts do not
condemn us, we have confidence before God; and we receive from him whatever
we ask, because we keep his commandments and do what pleases him. And this
is his commandment, that we should believe in the name of his Son Jesus
Christ and love one another, just as he has commanded us. All who
keep his commandments abide in him, and he in them. And by this we know that
he abides in us, by the Spirit which he has given us.
Beloved, do not believe every spirit,
but test the spirits to see whether they are of God; for many false prophets
have gone out into the world. By this you know the Spirit of God: every
spirit which confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is of God,
and every spirit which does not confess Jesus is not of God. This is the
spirit of antichrist, of which you heard that it was coming, and now it is
in the world already. Little children, you are of God, and have overcome
them; for he who is in you is greater than he who is in the world. They are
of the world, therefore what they say is of the world, and the world listens
to them. We are of God. Whoever knows God listens to us, and he who is not
of God does not listen to us. By this we know the spirit of truth and the
spirit of error.
Beloved, let us love one another; for
love is of God, and he who loves is born of God and knows God. He who does
not love does not know God; for God is love. In this the love of God was
made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that
we might live through him. In this is love, not that we loved God but that
he loved us and sent his Son to be the expiation for our sins.
THE GREAT LENT - A Week by Week
Meaning
Rev. George Mastrantonis
THE INSTITUTE OF LENT
There are institutes and
symbols adopted by nations, churches or groups of men which represent
certain ideals accumulated in the past. These institutes, that is
precepts recognized as authoritative, and symbols represent the thoughts
and feelings of those who created or adopted them and put in them all
the experience of the past, often through struggle and sacrifice. A few
feet of ribbon for instance, red, blue and white in color, have little
value as is. But if one puts them in a certain pattern of stripes and
stars, they become the flag of the United States and represent the
ideals and unity of the people of America. The flag reminds us of the
people's struggle for liberty. It represents the national unity which
attained for them their rights as a people. The same could be said for
the institutes of a nation, army or any group of people. These
institutes are created by the people and are used by them in certain
ways for certain aims. Some of these institutes are the means for
achieving certain values and ideals. In the life of the Church of Christ
there are many institutes created and maintained to meet the needs of
the people - the Ecclesia. Among these is the Great Lent which
falls within the year-cycle of the life of the Church before
Pascha-Easter. Lent is the period of time for self-examination by the
believer; of putting on the spiritual armor of the Militant Church; of
applying the riches of prayers and almsgiving; of adopting deeply the
meaning of repentance; of atonement and reconciliation with God
Almighty.
This great period of Lent
before Easter is called by the Orthodox Church, Tessaracoste (Quadragesimal),
which comes from the word forty (the 40 days of "fasting"). This
Institute of the 40. days of Lent precedes the Resurrection of Christ.
The celebration of the Resurrection of Christ does not fall on the same
date each year, but according to the determination of the position of
the moon and spring equinox, which is based on the original setting
during the last Events of the life of Christ on earth. This 40-day
period of Lent is a period of "abstinence" from foods, but primarily
from personal iniquities. Abstinence from foods (fasting) alone is a
means of attaining virtue; it is not an end in itself. During the period
of fasting one makes a special attempt to evaluate his calling as a
Christian; to listen to the voice of the Gospel and heed its
commandments; to accept the constant invitation to enter Christ's
Kingdom. It is an open invitation to everyone willing to enter; who
believes in Christ and repents his iniquities; who makes an "about face"
directly to Christ. To accomplish this - Which is a year-round concern -
the Christian Church, dating back many years, out of experience and
according to the nature of man instituted certain days of prayer and
fasting as steps in a ladder to help those who need guidance to reach
this spiritual plateau. All of these steps must have genuine personal
meaning to avoid becoming merely a habit and routine. Fasting
encompasses the entire pious life of the Christian, as Christ
proclaimed, that symbolizes a deep acceptance of His admonition to
"repent". This can be achieved not so much in terms of time, but in
deeds in love of God and one's fellow man.
During the period of the
Great Lent the awakening of the spirit of man comes about through
inspiration from the Head of the Church, Jesus Christ. It is a time of
self-examination and preparation, and of taking an inventory of one's
inner life. He and Christ know his exact condition. At this time one
sees himself in the mirror of the Gospel - how he looks. One finds the
means and ways to correct and improve himself. Lent is a period of time
when one delves into himself with the light of the Holy Spirit in order
to rid himself of the impediments which hold him back. It is a period
when one strengthens his faith by more prayer and devotional life.
Let us then examine the
meaning of fasting, which became an Institute of the Church. Fasting
means the total abstinence from foods, as the original Greek word in the
Bible, nesteia, literally means. The word fasting today is used for
selection of foods and a limiting of their quantity. Fasting also can
mean eating once a day bread, salt and water, after sunset. Although the
period of Lent appeals to the function of man as a whole in repentance,
self-examination, almsgiving, relationship with people with whom one is
at odds, attitudes toward life, the abstinence from foods plays a vital
role in the life of the Christian. The quantity and kinds of foods
selected for this period of Lent help control carnal desires and develop
discipline and a pious life. Fasting from foods is not a virtuous
activity in itself, but a means for its achievement. But it has a
distinct place in the life of the Christian, especially during the Great
Lent.
THE ORIGIN OF FASTING
One may ask how the
Institute of fasting originated. Was it a tradition handed down by the
Apostles? Was it determined as such by the early Church? Was the
duration of fasting established from the beginning? These and similar
questions require an answer.
Fasting before Easter was
not determined by the early Church as such either in specific days or
for certain foods. In the New Testament the word for fasting, nesteia,
means abstinence from food entirely, and was originally a Jewish custom
reluctantly practiced by the Jews, although it was not an official
requirement. Bishop Irenaios of Lyon (192) wrote a letter to the Bishop
of Rome that there is a great difference about the duration of fasting
before Easter. Some people, he wrote, fast one day, others two, still
others more days. Some of them fast 40 hours continuously, day and
night, from all foods (Eusebuis, Ecclesiastical History, 524,12).
Tertuuian, an ecclesiastical writer of the 3rd century, refers to
abstinence from foods as being two days, Friday and Saturday. Some of
the early Christians abstained from foods the whole day and ate only in
the evenings, while others ate not at all, day or night, as did those
who were fasting for 40 hours. Other Christians extended the period of
fasting beyond the two days to one week (during the mid-third
century),'but everyone was allowed to extend the duration of fasting as
long as he wanted. Thus, these Christians added hours and days of
fasting at their own will, beyond the customary duration of time (Dionysios,
Bishop of Alexandria, P. G. Migne 10, 1278).
THE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF
FASTING
Over the years, the days of
fasting increased to seven before Easter. These Christians ate in the
evenings, and then only bread, salt and water, as recorded by Epiphanios
in 403. The difference in counting the hours of fasting resulted from
the different calculations of the time of the Resurrection of Christ in
the Gospels (Matthew 28:1, before midnight; John 20:1, after midnight;
Mark 16:2, at sunrise). The period of fasting before Easter was extended
to 40 days without substantial evidence of any authoritative
determination. The fact is that the 40 days of fasting was known to the
Fathers of the First Ecumenical Synod (325). St. Augustine during the
fifth century attributes the lengthy period of 40 days to the
persecutions, 306-323. Others refer to the example of Christ fasting 40
days in the wilderness (Matthew 4:2); or to Moses (Exodus 34:28), or to
Prophet Elias (1 Kings 19:8 - III Vasilion LXX) Probably the 40-day
fasting period among the people was started during the persecutions,
because the people took refuge in monasteries and followed the order of
abstinence of the monks, which was very strict. Also hermits and other
pious people of sobriety kept a fasting period of 40 days during the
mid-third century, and this was handed down to the people. In reality,
the 40-day practice for fasting before Easter was not a simultaneous
practice in all the Christian lands, but a gradual process. Fasting as
such was practiced by the people at the, very beginning for only two or
three days per week, Wednesday and Friday and in some places Saturday
(in the West).
In the course of time, a
gradual increase in the number of weeks also took place. However,
between East and West the number of weeks of Lent differed, with seven
weeks being established in the East and six in the West by the mid-sixth
century. The reason for the difference in the number of weeks between
East and West was because in the West Saturday was a fast day along with
Wednesday and Friday, while in the East Saturday was not a fast day
except the Saturday of Holy Week, according to the Canons of the Church
(Canon 66, Apostolic Fathers; Canon 55A Sixth Ecumenical Synod in 692 -
Canon 18, Gangra Synod in 340-370). The adding of Saturday by the Church
in the West as a fast day was related to the thought that the Body of
Christ was in the tomb on this day. This innovation of fasting on
Saturday was fought by Tertullian, Hippolytos (Ecclesiastical writer)
and Bishop Jerome.
However, Bishop Inocentios
of Rome (401-417) ratified the Saturday fast, and gradually this day
became a fixed day in the West. In rebuke of this practice in the West,
Bishop Ignatios of Antioch in a letter denounced this Saturday fast (ch.
13). During the seventh century, Bishop Gregory I of Rome added four
days before the beginning of the six weeks of Lent, starting with
Wednesday, known as Ash Wednesday. The Church in the East, on the other
hand, added an additional week before the seven weeks, known as Cheese
Week, to complete the 40 days of fasting in Lent before Easter,
excluding the seven Saturdays and eight Sundays, which are non-fast
days. The reason for the number of 40 days of fasting during the Great
Lent is obscure. The famous canonist of the twelfth century, Balsamon,
writes, "There is but a forty day abstinence, that of the Pascha, but if
one also likes to keep the weekly fast for other feasts ... he is not to
be disgraced" (Migne PG 138,1001).
Fasting from foods is
relevant to the condition of the health of the Christian, however.
Fasting is not for the sake of fasting alone:
"Fasting was devised in order to humble
the body. If, therefore, the body is already in a state of
humbleness and illness or weakness, the person ought to partake of
as much as he or she may wish and be able to get along with food and
drink" (Canon 8 of St. Timothy of Alexandria, 381).
THE MEANING OF THE FEAST
DAYS OF LENT
Great Lent is a period of
time when the people are more conscious of their spiritual character.
The passages of the Gospels and the Epistles, the hymnology and prayers,
the spirit of the Church - all endeavor to help the Christian cleanse
himself spiritually through repentance. "Repent" is the first word Jesus
Christ spoke in His proclamation to the people, as the epitome of His
Gospel. Repentance is the main motivation of the Christian which acts to
free him from sin. One's recognition of his sin, his contrition over it
and lastly his decision to make an about-face change of his attitude are
the steps of repentance. For one can learn to recognize iniquities from
the Bible and the teachings of the Church. During the period of Lent the
Christian is called to self-examination and self-control by the radiance
of the Event of the Resurrection of Christ. This is why the Church
designated such a period of time be observed before this great feast
day.
Fasting in its religious
setting is abstinence from food, always in relation to a religious event
or feast. Fasting in itself has no meaning in the Christian Church, but
has a role the attainment of Christian virtues. It is not to be accepted
as a mere custom without a spiritual purpose. Fasting is understood as a
means of temperance and sobriety, especially in relation to prayer,
devotion and purity. It is also understood to be related to giving alms
to the poor. The roots of fasting in the Christian Church are to be
found in the Old Testament and the Jewish religion, both for certain
days and certain foods. As a general rule, fasting precedes a religious
feast. Many verses in the Old Testament refer to this:
"Thus says the Lord of Hosts: the fast
of the fourth month, and the fast of the fifth, and the fast of the
seventh and the fast of the tenth, shall be to the house of Judah
seasons of joy and gladness, and cheerful feasts; therefore, love,
truth and peace", Zechariah 8:18-19.
In continuation of the
practice of fasting, the Christian Church determined the period of Lent
to depend upon the great Feast of Easter, as set forth by the First
Ecumenical Synod in 325. The Church determined the day on which the
Resurrection of Christ would be celebrated, according to the conditions
that existed at the time of this Event. Thus, the Synod set forth that
the great Feast of Easter would be celebrated on: the first Sunday,
after the full moon, after the Spring Equinox (March 21), and always
after the Jewish Passover. Thus, this great Feast is a moveable date in
the calendar. Therefore, Great Lent, which depends upon the date of
Easter, also is moveable, each year being celebrated on a different
date, (Sunday), depending on the above conditions.
The four weeks which
precede Great Lent are considered preparatory, a forerunner to Lent.
These four weeks, along with the eight weeks of Lent, are characterized
by the Church as Triodion, meaning "thrice-hymns", a name which
has no bearing on the substance of Lent itself:
 | The four weeks preceding Lent are known
as: |
 |
- Sunday of the Tax Collector and
Pharisee (from the Parable),
- Sunday of the Prodigal Son (from the
Parable),
- Sunday of Meat (the Final Judgment),
- Sunday of Cheese (Adam's expulsion
from Paradise);
|
 | The eight weeks of the Great Lent are:
|
 |
- First Sunday (Sunday of Orthodoxy),
- Second Sunday (St. Gregory Palamas),
- Third Sunday (Adoration of Cross),
- Fourth Sunday (St. John of Climax),
- Fifth Sunday (St. Mary of Egypt),
- Palm Sunday through Holy Saturday and
Easter Sunday.
|
 | During Great Lent: |
 |
- Every day the Great Compline is read,
- Every Wednesday and Friday the Liturgy
of the Presanctified Gifts is officiated.
- On four Friday evenings a fourth of
the Akathist Hymn is read, with the entire Hymn read the fifth
Friday.
|
A. THE FOUR PREPARATORY WEEKS
SUNDAY OF THE TAX COLLECTOR AND PHARISEE (John
1:43-52).
Arrogance is the perversion of the soul and
spirit of man; it is the greatest weapon of the evil one; it is the
mother of hypocrisy; it is the obstacle of spiritual progress: it is the
degradation of civilization; it is the greatest enemy of man; it is the
opposite of repentance; it is the corruption of the conscience of man.
This is why the Church designated the first Sunday of preparation for
acceptance of the Message of the Resurrection of Christ, with the
Parable of the Tax Collector and Pharisee being read. The root of evil,
arrogance, should be uprooted and replaced with the virtue of
humbleness, which is the teaching of this Parable. The highest degree of
man's arrogance is when a person speaks to God in prayers as did the
Pharisee, who said, "God I thank thee", only for the opportunity to
enumerate his achievements publicly, comparing himself to others who,
according to him, were sinners, saying "I am not like other men,
sinners, or even like this tax collector". He extolled himself saying,
"I fast, I give tithe", which he did. But the more he boasted, the more
he condemned himself through arrogance.
On the other hand, the tax collector confessed:
"God be merciful to me a sinner". The repentance of the tax collector is
the basis of Christian life; it is the passage into the Kingdom; it is
the reestablishment of the image of God in the soul of His creature.
Humbleness is the queen of all virtues. Thus, the first phrase of the
hymnology of the day is: "Let us not pray pharisee-like. . . . Open to
me the doors of repentance". The combination of almsgiving, prayer and
piety, along with the intention of repentance like that of the tax
collector, is imperative in the life of a Christian. The attitude of the
tax collector made him a steward of divine gifts. Repentance and
confession of faith is the same two-sided coin.
SUNDAY OF THE PRODIGAL SON (Luke 15:11-32).
This Parable relates to man's prodigality with
the divine gifts to man. It is the consequence of arrogance. Prodigality
is the unreckoning extravagance in sensuality. The prodigal is one who
cannot be saved, whose life is dissolute, who squandered his father's
property. Prodigality, then, is the second basic corruption toward which
man is inclined. This is why this Parable is known as the Parable of the
Prodigal Son, the subject matter of this week. Despite the
characterization in this Parable, its main subject is the warm parental
love of the Father. The father's love was unbroken and firm for his
prodigal son. His love was shown more at the return of his son than in
the beginning, despite the fact that his son squandered his
"properties". In the end, however, the son exchanged his prodigality for
repentance, and this is the crux of the parable. This moment changes the
prodigal son into the prudent son, expelling arrogance with repentance.
While the son was returning to his father, he kept rehearsing over and
over again: "Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you". But
when the son saw his father's house from afar, his father saw him, and
ran to him and embraced him warmly. Thus, the son did not have the
opportunity to tell his father what he had been rehearsing. The son at
the beginning said, "give me", but in the end he asked, "make me", which
is the depth of repentance and obedience, the challenging factors of a
Christian.
SUNDAY OF MEAT (Matthew 25:31-46).
It is a strong conviction and belief of the
Church that Christ will come a second time into the world, not to save
the world, but in "glory" to judge the world. In as much as God knew in
advance the destiny of each man, why did He not prevent the
non-believers and wrong-doers from being born and being condemned
everlastingly, someone might ask. The fate of people is wrought on this
earth, because after death, there is no opportunity for repentance in
order to better one's state. Man's finite mind cannot comprehend God's
love for his salvation and judgment for his condemnation. Yet, here is
the center of the belief that there is a Supreme Judge for those who
committed iniquities and wrong-doings without punishment or discovery
while on earth. Approaching Lent and Easter, the Christian is admonished
to correct his faults by fasting, praying and almsgiving, as recorded in
the Gospel passage of the day. The Last Judgment will be made according
to the good works of each person as a result of his faith in and worship
of God. These good works are directed to the "least", those in need, as
Christ Himself says, "as you did it not to one of the least of these,
you did it not to me", (v. 45). This Sunday is the last day before Lent
that the believer eats meat.
SUNDAY OF CHEESE (Matthew 6:14-21).
The theme of this Sunday refers to the
expulsion of Adam from Paradise. Adam in Paradise misused his freedom by
allowing himself to be persuaded by the evil one to disobey the command
to not eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. The
evil one convinced him that by so doing he would know more than God. The
Church in its hymnology presents the condition of Adam outside of
Paradise as weeping and working hard for his livelihood. The Gospel
passage of the day refers to the manner of praying, fasting, almsgiving
and all good works. These are to be done in secret, without boasting.
The meaning of this Sunday is the condescension of God to the human
weakness, "for if you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father
also will forgive you; but if you do not forgive men their trespasses,
neither will your Father forgive your trespasses" (v. 14-15). This is
emphasized in the Lord's Prayer.,The week (six days) preceding Sunday of
Cheese and after Meat Sunday, is the addition to the period of the Great
Lent which completes the forty days of fasting (excluding Saturdays and
Sundays). The name of this Sunday, "Cheese", implies that the fast of
this week is the gradual transition from eating meat to the strict fast
of Lent, which starts the next day, Monday, with the first Sunday of
Lent at the end of the preliminary seven days (Sunday of Orthodoxy).
B. THE SEVEN SUNDAYS OF THE GREAT LENT
SECOND SUNDAY OF LENT - ST. GREGORY PALAMAS
(Mark 2:1-12).
This Sunday commemorates the life of St.
Gregory Palamas (14th century). The Church dedicates this Sunday to St.
Gregory for his orthodox faith, theological knowledge, virtuous life,
miracles and his efforts to clarify the orthodox teaching on the subject
of Hesychasm (from the Greek, meaning quiet.) Hesychasm was a
system of mysticism propagated on Mt. Athos by 14th century monks who
believed that man was able, through an elaborate system of ascetic
practices based upon perfect quiet of body and mind, to arrive at the
vision of the divine light, with the real distinction between the
essence and the operations of God. Gregory became noted for his efforts
to explain the difference between the correct teaching and this theory.
Gregory was dedicated to an ascetic life of prayer and fasting, which
are practices of Lent.
THIRD SUNDAY OF LENT - ADORATION OF THE CROSS
(Mark 8:34-38; 9:1).
This Sunday commemorates the venerable Cross
and the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ. The Cross as such takes on meaning
and adoration because of the Crucifixion of Christ upon it. Therefore,
whether it be in hymns or prayers, it is understood that the Cross
without Christ has no meaning or place in Christianity. The adoration of
the Cross in the middle of Great Lent is to remind the faithful in
advance of the Crucifixion of Christ. Therefore, the Dassages from the
Bible and the hymnology refer to the Passions, the sufferings, of Jesus
Christ: The passages read this day repeat the calling of the Christian
by Christ to dedicate his life, for "If any man would come after me, let
him deny himself and take up his cross and follow me (Christ)" (v.
34-35). This verse clearly indicates the kind of dedication which is
needed by the Christian in three steps:
- To renounce his arrogance and disobedience
to God's Plan,
- To lift up his personal cross (the
difficulties of life) with patience, faith and the full acceptance
of the Will of God without complaint that the burden is too heavy;
having denied himself and lifted up his cross leads him to the,
- Decision to follow Christ.
These three voluntary steps are three links
which cannot be separated from each other, because the main power to
accomplish them is the Grace of God, which man always invokes. The
Adoration of the Cross is expressed by the faithful through prayer,
fasting, almsgiving and the forgiveness of the trespasses of others. On
this Sunday the Adoration of the Cross is commemorated with a special
service following the Divine Liturgy in which the significance of the
Cross is that it leads to the Resurrection of Christ.
FOURTH SUNDAY OF LENT - ST. JOHN OF THE CLIMAX
(Mark 9:17-31).
This Sunday commemorates St. John of the Climax
(6th century) who is the writer of the book called The Ladder (climax)
of Paradise. This book contains 30 chapters, with each chapter as a step
leading up to a faithful and pious life as the climax of a Christian
life. The spirit of repentance and devotion to Christ dominates the
essence of this book, along with the monastic virtues and vices. He was
an ascetic and writer on the spiritual life as a monk-abbot of Sinai
Monastery. These steps of the ladder as set forth by St. John are to be
practiced by the Christian especially during this period of the Great
Lent. Each step leading to the top step of the ladder, is the climactic
essence of the true meaning of a Christian life.
FIFTH SUNDAY OF LENT - ST. MARY OF EGYPT (Mark
10:32-45).
This Sunday commemorates the life of St. Mary
of Egypt, who is a shining example of repentance from sin through prayer
and fasting. She lived a sinful life for many years, but was converted
to a Christian life. She went into the wilderness to live an ascetic
life for many years, praying and fasting in repentance of her previous
sinful life, and dying there. St. Mary's life exemplifies her conviction
about Christ, which motivated the changing of her life from sin to
holiness through repentance. Her understanding of repentance involved
not a mere change from small things in her life, but an extreme change
of her entire attitude and thoughts. The Church commemorates St. Mary
for her recognition of her own sins as an example of how one can free
oneself from the slavery and burden of wrongdoings. This recognition of
sin is imperative during Lent for the faithful as a means of
self-examination and preparation for a more virtuous life in
anticipation of the Crucifixion and the Resurrection of Christ.
PALM SUNDAY (John 12:12-18).
This Sunday commemorates the triumphant
entrance of Jesus Christ into Jerusalem. The people of Jerusalem
received Christ as a king, and, therefore, took branches of palms and
went out to meet Him, laying down the palms in His path. The people
cried out the prophecy of Zechariah: "Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes
in the name of the Lord, even the King of Israel" (v. 13; of Zechariah
9:9). The celebration of the Jewish Passover brought crowds of Jews and
converted Jews to Jerusalem. They had heard of the works and words of
Christ, especially about the resurrection of Lazarus. All the events
related to Christ had a Messianic meaning for the Jews at the time. This
vexed the high priests and pharisees. As usual, Christ went to the
Temple to pray and teach. That evening Christ departed for Bethany. The
tradition of the Church of distributing palms on this Sunday comes from
the act of the people in placing the branches of palms in front of
Christ, and henceforth symbolizes for the Christian the victory of
Christ over evil forces and death.
HOLY WEEK.
The period of Great Lent includes the days of
Holy Week. This is the time when Christians who went through the whole
period of Lent in prayer and fasting approach the Feast of Feasts to
celebrate the Passions of Christ and His Resurrection. During the entire
Lent the faithful try to practice and live the ideals and standards of
this period in the light of Easter. This is why the Hymnology of the
entire period of Lent, especially during Holy Week, refers to the
Resurrection of Christ as the center of the Christian Faith. Each day of
Holy Week is dedicated to the Events and teachings of Christ during His
last week on earth. The faithful who participate in the services of this
week are more conscious of their duties to themselves and to their
neighbors through fasting, praying, giving alms, forgiving the
trespasses of others; in other words, participating, day by day, in the
spirit of the Gospel of Christ.
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF GREAT LENT
Great Lent before Easter is when the Christian
participates fully in preparing himself to praise and glorify his God as
Lord and Savior. Great Lent is like a "workshop" where the character of
the faithful is spiritually uplifted and strengthened; where his life is
rededicated to the principles and ideals of the Gospel; where the faith
culminates in deep conviction of life; where apathy and disinterest turn
into vigorous activities of faith and good works. Lent is not for the
sake of Lent itself, as fasting is not for the sake of fasting. But they
are means by which and for which the individual believer prepares
himself to reach for, accept and attain the calling of his Savior.
Therefore, the significance of Great Lent is highly appraised, not only
by the monks who gradually increased the length of time of the Lent, but
also by the lay people themselves, although they do not observe the full
length of time. As such, Great Lent is the sacred Institute of the
Church to serve the individual believer in participating as a member of
the Mystical Body of Christ, and, from time to time, to improve the
standards of faith and morals in his Christian life. The deep intent of
the believer during the Great Lent is "forgetting what lies behind and
straining forward to what lies ahead, I press on toward the goal of the
prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus", Philippians 3:13-14.
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Palm Sunday

The Sunday of Saint Mary of Egypt

The Sunday of Saint John Climacus

The Sunday of
the Adoration of the Life Giving Cross

The Sunday of Saint Gregory
of Palamas

The Sunday of Orthodoxy
Orthodox Christian Pascha Video |