BE AWARE:
This item is a (deceitfully) modified world-orthodox version taken from a pro-MP website:
The original sermon published in Orthodox Word issue #``117 July-August 1984:
Eugene's lay sermons were written at the request of St. John S&SF who published them (in English) in the Joy of All Who Sorrow Church bulletin. Later Platina collected them and published them in their Orthodox Word magazine (still claiming they had St. John's continued blessing to publish the magazine even after they left ROCOR). Also, Platina collected the original sermons and published them in a book, Heavenly Realm, in 1984. The book is, not surprisingly, out of print. jh
________________________________________________________________________
Sharing: Transfiguration of the Lord, by Hieromonk Seraphim (Rose)
Inbox |
Dan Everiss
<oregdan@hotmail.com> | Fri, Aug 19, 2016 at 8:51 PM |
|
Forty
days before He was delivered to an ignominious death for our sins, our
Lord revealed to three of His disciples the glory of His Divinity.
“And
after six days Jesus taketh Peter, James, and John his brother and
bringeth them up into a high mountain apart; and was transfigured before
them: and His face did shine as the sun, and His raiment was white as
the light” (Matt. 17:1-2). This was the event to which our Lord was referring when He said, “There be some standing here which shall not taste of death till they see the Son of man coming in His Kingdom” (Matt.
16:28). By this means the faith of the disciples was strengthened and
prepared for the trial of our Lord’s approaching passion and death; and
they were able to see in it not mere human suffering, but the entirely
voluntary passion of the Son of God.
The
disciples saw also Moses and Elijah talking with our Lord, and thereby
they understood that He was not Himself Elijah or another of the
prophets, as some thought, but someone much greater: He Who could call
upon the Law and the Prophets to be His witnesses, since He was the
fulfillment of both.
The
three parables of the feast concern the appearance of God to Moses and
Elijah on Mount Sinai, and it is indeed appropriate that the greatest
God-seers of the Old Testament should be present at the glorification of
the Lord in His New Testament, seeing for the first time His humanity,
even as the disciples were seeing for the first time His Divinity.
Orthodox
theology sees in the Transfiguration a prefigurement of our Lord’s
Resurrection and His Second Coming, and more than this—since every event
of the Church calendar has an application to the individual spiritual
life—of the transformed state in which Christians shall appear at the
end of the world, and in some measure even before then. In the
foreshadowing of future glory which is celebrated in this Feast, the
Holy Church comforts her children by showing them that after the
temporary sorrows and deprivations with which this earthly life is
filled, the glory of eternal blessedness will shine forth; and in it
even the body of the righteous will participate.
It
is a pious Orthodox custom to offer fruits to be blessed at this feast;
and this offering of thanksgiving to God contains a spiritual sign,
too. Just as fruits ripen and are transformed under the action of the
summer sun, so is man called to a spiritual transfiguration through the
light of God’s word by means of the Sacraments. Some saints, (for
example - Saint Seraphim of Sarov), under the action of this life-giving
grace, have shone bodily before men even in life with this same
uncreated Light of God’s glory; and that is another sign to us of the
heights to which we, as Christians, are called and the state that awaits
us - to be transformed in the image of Him Who was transfigured on
Mount Tabor.
|
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Guest comments MAYBE can be made by email.
joannahigginbotham@runbox.com
Anonymous comments will not be published. Daniel will not see unpublished comments. If you have a message for him, you need to contact him directly.
oregdan@hotmail.com