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20 October 2012

the essence of Lent (how can we try and express it) in the most concise and accessible manner?



Translated from Bulgarian




Bishop Fotii of Triaditza

Speech Before the Rite of [asking] Forgiveness
Cheese-fare Sunday

February 26 (13 OC), 2012



Firstly, beloved, let us thank the Savior for bestowing upon us this year as well to stand at the threshold of the Holy and Great Lent [fast], before the doors of repentance. Over the years there have formed and layered up habits in each one of us – habits of perceiving and spending the time of the Lenten period. Usually, these habits are very superficial and relate to the performance of our church duties – [namely] down-limiting food, more frequent confessing and Holy Communion, which is certainly needed and very essential – but it is alarming that during this period, too, our lives continue to run – in [its] essence, internally, in our mind and in our heart within that same [river-] bed it keeps running in to begin with. And our lives run, alas, mostly in the mainstream [river-bed] of multi-concerns, vanity, selfishness... Let me not continue to enumerate. Useful and utterly needful is for us – whenever we stand on the threshold of the Holy and Great Lent – to try and ponder within ourselves on what is the meaning of the fast, what is its sense, how have we spent the Lent thus far. We need to deepen and constantly update our understanding of the essence of Lent. How can we try and express it in the most concise and accessible manner? Through prayer, fasting and charity during the Great and Holy Lent we should exert more and more [new] efforts to get off our self-closed “self” as the center of our attention. We should again and again strive [make efforts] to rediscover our relationship with God and with neighbor. We should – through prayer, fasting and charity – strive to make ever greater the space in our heart that is [may be] besprinkled by our communion with God and with neighbor according to the holy evangelical God-man Christ’s commandments. Seen in this way, how really shallow our ideas, concepts of the fast are, and how semi-mechanically, basically speaking [seen in essence] casually, superficially we spend its time and fulfill our ecclesiastical duties, if we may call them so, although the term is highly incorrect, speaking [seen] in essence because word goes not of any duties [that are] outward in respect to the core of our life but of a way of thinking, [and] feeling, a way of living that brings us closer to God and to our neighbor.

How few of us associate the concept of the fast with acts of charity with opening up to our neighbor, to his needs? How few of us feel the need of God’s mercy for oneself and at the same time feel another need related with this need – to bestow charity? In whatever way and with what they can. It is quite natural for that charity to find a material expression – if this indeed is within our capacities. In case we have no capacity to actively support our neighbor in his want, what is preventing us from bestowing on him charitable thoughts and compassionate feelings? We are prevented by our complacent, self-closed in itself “me” [ego], which finds endless excuses to remain deaf and blind to the pain of our neighbor, to the want of our neighbor. 

Each one of us – to have sensed to some degree how much he needs the mercy of God – will naturally become willing to bestow mercy himself, and mercy – as a condition – most of all – of our heart, as our heart’s disposition and willing for us to bestow mercy – finds an expression –– and an easy one, simple expression in forgiveness. If we cannot forgive, if something from within prevents us from forgiving, this again is our self-glorifying, self-closed in itself “me” [ego]. Sometimes it all sinks [deep] into reasoning, analyzing what our neighbor does, of his qualities, his behavior – and in result to these reasonings, to this analysis – we convince ourselves that it is not so simple to bestow forgiveness. Led by an earthly logic we reach the conclusion it is very difficult to bestow true forgiveness, and even if we do so once in a while, we very easily revert to where we started from, i.e. go back to the prison cell of our “me” [ego]. And here is what St. Ap. Paul teaches us in his epistle to the Christians of the Asia Minor city of Colosse: “Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering; Forbearing one another, and forgiving one another, ...: even as Christ forgave you, so also do ye.” (Col. 3:12-13). I.e. we should forgive one another as God-man, the Savior Lord Jesus Christ forgives the sins of each of us. We can never learn to forgive thus even in the smallest measure, unless we have at least sparks of life in Christ, with Christ. If we view both Christ and His teaching, and our neighbor – if we watch [out] for how and whence? – we watch non-free, watch as prisoners through the small window of the prison cell, called “me” [ego] – then our life will be a painful circulation; then we shall oppressed by the feeling we are treading the same place over and over again and everything would repeat as if in a painful cycle. We can be free only – and alone – in Christ. We can be free only and alone when the law of Christ becomes our breath, were this even in the smallest degree. We can be Christians in spirit and truth only when we try again and again to put a new beginning; [when] again and again we try to renew your each and every thought, feeling and desire [of ours], to renew them through the grace of the Holy Spirit, which is the core of every single word of Christ. And so, in His mercy, in His love for mankind may Christ the Lord vouchsafe us to spend with real benefit for our souls the time of the Great and Holy Lent and for us to bow also to His glorious, salvific, and life-giving Resurrection. Amen.

13 July 2012

St. Martyr Dorothea of Caesarea in Cappadocia



Saint Dorothea /Dorothy/, February 6/19

St. Martyr Dorothea lived in Caesarea in Cappadocia, and suffered under the Emperor Diocletian in 288 or 300, along with women martyrs Christina and Callista and martyr Theophilus.

Saint Dorothea was a pious girl, a Christian, distinguished with great meekness, humility, chastity, and wisdom given by God, which astonished many. Caught at an order by governor Sapricius, she firmly confessed her faith in Christ and was subjected to tortures. Failing to break down the will of the saint, the governor gave her to two women – the sisters Christine and Callisto, who were previously Christians, but – fearing the tortures, renounced Christ and began to lead impious life. He ordered them to persuade saint Dorothea to bring sacrifice to the pagan gods. However, the opposite happened: the women – convinced by Saint Dorothea that through God’s mercy salvation is granted to all repentant – did repent and turned to Christ again. For this they were tied back to back and burned in a tar barrel. The saint sisters Christina and Callista died as martyrs, bringing a penitential prayer to the Lord and [He] redeemed their sin of apostasy.

Saint Dorothea was again subjected to tortures, which she suffered with great joy and also happily welcomed the death sentence. When the saint was led to her execution, a certain learned man, (scholastic) Theophilus, told her with a sneer: “You bride of Christ, send me rose flowers and apples from thy Bridegroom’s garden”. The martyr nodded to him in response.


Before her death, the saint asked to be given time to pray [a while]. When she finished the prayer, an angel appeared before her in the form of a handsome youth and handed her in a clean canvas three apples and three rose flowers. The saint asked that all this be given to Theophilus, after which she was beheaded by sword.

Having received the [blissful] gifts of grace, the persecutor of Christians until recently was astounded, he believed in the Saviour and confessed himself a Christian. Subjected for this to cruel tortures, St. Theophilus was martyred by beheading by sword.

Santa Dorotea, Rome, Trastevere

The relics of St. Dorothea are [kept] in Rome, in the church of her name; her head is also in Rome, in the Church of the Theotokos in Trastevere.

Santa Maria, Rome, Trastevere

The ancient church of San Silvestro boasts a stone titrated to Sts. Sylvester and Dorothy [Rector Julian De Datis took care of the translation, composing a memorial stone over the remains of Roman times – that stone is still preserved in the Church’s Sacristy and was also titrated to Sts. Sylvester and Dorothy by the second half of XVI c].