Shepherd's word - Bribery

The sacred laws are very strict against the one who buys his painting with money, “making from the grace...

10 words about my best vacation

Nowadays, a family is simply a network of people who care for each other. It can contain hundreds or...
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Shepherd's word - Bribery
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10 words about my best vacation
2011, Articles, Raiati

Sunday of Orthodoxy / 13.03.2011

After starting the Lent last Sunday, we went through some fasting and austerity; and after intensifying our prayers, the church decided to devote this Sunday to remind us that we fast in order to strengthen our faith, so it named this Sunday as the Sunday of Orthodoxy which is a Greek word that means “the straight dogma”. If you faith in God wasn’t straight, your fasting will be worthless.

The church mentioned in today’s epistle saints from the Old Testament, and reminded us of their passions (jeers, flogging, beating, imprisonment, stoning, and killing by the sword). The epistle said that all of those were commended for their faith.

In addition to that, the church put in the second Sunday of the Lent a remembrance for St. Gregory Palamas (14th Century) who clarified the Orthodox faith in a strong way through his teaching about the uncreated divine grace.

The chosen Chapter from the Gospel contains the calling of the apostles as told by John. The first one mentioned among them is Philip that was from Bethsaida (different from the Lebanese Saida). Also, Andrew and his brother Peter were from this city. The apostle finds another person that would join Jesus and become one of the twelve: The person that believes passes the faith to others. The fourth called apostle was Nathanael who refused that a prophet can come from Nazareth.

However, Jesus accepted him. The Lord revealed himself for the person that doubted and therefore the latter confessed saying: “you are the Son of God; you are the king of Israel”. The Lord’s comment was: “Very truly I tell you, you will see heaven open and the angels of God ascending and descending on the Son of Man”.

Christ combines the heavens and the earth, and he is the only mediator between God and men. This is our faith; Orthodoxy can be summarized in these words.

The fathers of the Old Testament looked at Christ and believed in that. We have only believed that he has come, and both faiths are the same. However, the old fathers “none of them received what had been promised; since God had planned something better for us so that only together with us would they be made perfect”. No one shall be saved before seeing the crucifixion and resurrection. The fathers of the Old Testament saw Christ through prophecy, while, we have seen him through his Gospel, i.e. through what has been achieved.

The apostles and the brothers saw him through their eyes. We did not see him that way. We accepted him through the apostles that preached us about him through the Gospel and we believed in the church that he embraces; the church that transmits him through preaching and the Holy Sacraments.

The Sunday of Orthodoxy combines those who saw him physically with those who didn’t. We hope that God would protect us in the Orthodox faith and prevents from us heresies, delinquencies and falling into deviations. All of this needs fighting in order to continue in frequent religious readings, participation in divine services, and praying especially in this blessed season that shall prepare us for the glorious Pascha.

Therefore, we are invited to a good fasting and reading that sanctifies the soul and renews its intellect. God shall be pleased if we fasted as brothers with all the church in order to walk together towards Resurrection.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “أحد الأرثوذكسية” – 13.03.2011

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The Word and the Spirit / 12.3.2011

The human soul is an arena for the tension between “rising” and “falling”. It can rise and it can fall. What is Good does not go along with Evil. They clash. “Bad things”, without knowing from where they come, proceed from you even though you are intrinsically bent towards what is good and are a dwelling for God. No other being nests in you. There is a transmittance into you of what is diabolic but there is also that which is divine until you are healed.

The matter is not one of good and evil tendencies that work themselves in the soul with one outweighing the other. The issue concerns what resides in your depths. The question the Lord pauses for you is: “Are you on my side, are you with me?” And the question is so for us on Judgment Day. The issue is not how well you have applied yourself to the Ten Commandments. These can only signify as to whether you are God’s friend or one of His enemies.

Your repentance in this life is not merely a transition of a moral nature from being “bad” to being “good”. This takes place through ongoing rigorous repentance; your repentance is a shift from your depravity to the presence of God; from you holding back from Him to His self-revelation to you. Being in evil, you cannot have your deeds acknowledged as good unless you seek God’s face; that is you enter into His love. Then He takes away your sins. The issue is not what you seek, but whom you seek. And if you happen to seek mercy, forgiveness and compassion, you are in fact seeking God; because your soul will not be satisfied except with Him.  He fills all of His “beauties”. “And of His fullness we have all received, grace upon grace.”(John 1: 16). Thus there is a variety of “graces” bur they all proceed from the Divine Fullness. It is not an over statement if I say that the sinner moves from a state of rejection of God to one of befriending Him. Without that relationship we inherit nothing and we see nothing.

This close relationship removes the remoteness existing between your power and God’s. The closeness might develop to union; one between “the Creator” and “the created” in such a way that the relationship of worship of the Creator by the creature remains. Without this closeness you remain “thrown” purposelessly in this universe. So it is necessary that God intervenes with Man to bring about salvation.

God comes down to you with Divine Love. The only thing that can exist between you and Him is communication. Love is a bond of unity between us and God though each remains in his own statehood independent of the other. If you believe, you can bring yourself to this encounter with Him.

In a dialogue, the two dialoguing parties are equal and of the same standing. This is not the case in our relationship with the Lord unless He condescends to make us so in His love. This is so in Christianity because of the Incarnation. God, in the incarnation, has put upon Himself the mantle of equality with us. And that is a genuine and voluntary act of condescension on God’s part; this is met with an ascending act on our part. That is the type of “dialogue” between God and Man. In reality, that means surrendering yourself to Him and submitting to His Word.

In this dialogue, God does not “give and take” with you; He only commands you. And it is so in matters of sin and temptation. He commands you to “silence” temptation and to say “No” to sin the moment it springs up in your mind. You do not “give and take” with the devil. You only renounce him from the start. Do not discuss things with him; just renounce him.  You take refuge in the Word of God only. Get filled with it in your heart so it flows in you and stand in the face of temptation so that you do not get in a dialogue with it (temptation).

The pleasure of sin can attract you. Only the light of Jesus, when it comes upon you, can pull you out of the attraction of pleasure to the joy of the intimacy with Christ. Thus you put away one pleasure for one that is greater. When the joy of the Lord draws you to Jesus, the choice (between sin and God) becomes easier. Rejoice in the Lord always so that your joy, having been made strong, becomes a source of resistance (to temptation) at times of trouble. You have to be intimate with the Lord so that He becomes your shelter and in that shelter you are helped.

Here comes the question about the training of the will. The human being is made strong every time one says “No” to temptation and seeks the power of the Holy Spirit. That is not only a training of the will; the Fathers tell us of the training of the “whole being” through asceticism, fasting, prayer and studying the Word of God.

Abstinence from eating and drinking and amusement and all that is not of benefit in the times we are in, makes us receptive of Grace. And being immersed in Grace, we become a “living word”, and we are empowered to reject what hinders His Word, and transforms us in feelings and thoughts to a divine mind and a dwelling of God in the Spirit.

Translated by Riad Moufarrij

Original Text: “الكلمة والروح” –An Nahar- 12.3.2011

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Sunday of Forgiveness / 06.03.2011

Tomorrow, Monday, we hope that God would let us enter the Lent with his grace because no person can fast without the power of this grace. Apostle Paul reminds us saying: “The night is nearly over; the day is almost here”. The light in the coming weeks of spiritual fight will be poured over us and we shall walk step by step towards the brightness of Pascha and to satisfaction in God’s eyes. In the epistle, Paul invites us to fight the harmful desires, and in the Gospel we have a part that speaks about forgiveness and a second one that speaks about fighting the evil lust for money.

What is the reason behind the words about forgiveness? The reason is that you fast with others and for others. Fasting is not a matter of eating or not eating, it is a matter of love. You should put the other always before you, you are purified for him. If you forgave him for what he has done to you, this shall push him into the Lord’s love and might make him accept you in a similar forgiveness. Your goal is to heal the person that offended you and not take revenge.

If your brother has done wrong towards you, this could be his revenge for something bad done to him. He would feel that he is paying for the wounds he has been through. When you don’t forgive, you would be keeping the other in his evil and adhering to your shocked pride. While if you forgave, you’d have gotten over this shock. Leave everything for God and he shall heal you and the other.

This way, you will be free from yourself and from hatred’s control over you. You are also free from your fasting: you shouldn’t feel that you have gained a merit in God’s notebook. This is why the Lord tells you: “when you fast, put oil on your head and wash your face, so that it will not be obvious to others that you are fasting, but only to your Father, who is unseen; and your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you”. The whole relationship between God and you exists in the heart and on heaven’s edge, while the outside shallow world has no value. Fasting is an exercise for a soul that asks its unity with the Lord.

The deep unity with the Lord, according to the Gospel of Matthew, is the freedom from money’s control over us: “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth …But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven”. Nothing can to deprive us from our internal freedom as money can: Food can also control and lead us into slavery. What benefit does fasting give you if you were captured by this desire?

The chapter ends with Jesus’ saying: “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also”. God’s authority over the heart isn’t compatible with money’s authority. Therefore, try not to make your treasure from money because it will then become a master over your heart.

Go into your fasting and do not reach satiety because food- even if it was Lenten food- is not your whole life. Chastity is when you are convinced that you should abandon everything. Getting liberated from everything you thought was necessary is the first step of your ascension on the ladder of divine ascent. When you do so, you’d have accepted God’s authority over you. Pray a lot so that nothing can have control over you; this is your first exercise in this Great Lent.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “أحد الغفران” – 06.03.2011

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Sunday of the Last Judgment / 27.02.2011

Before entering the Lent we should examine our hearts and see if they were contaminated, because in that case fasting will not benefit us. We will be in front of the judgment that today’s Gospel talks about where Jesus reveals himself as a judge. The image of the judgment is that there is a differentiation between those who have done good deeds and those who haven’t. The Lord called the good ones “blessed”, and when he knew that they will do good deeds he prepared for them the kingdom since the creation of the world, this means that they will reign with Christ. These people knew him in their lives here; but how could that be and they haven’t seen him? The evil didn’t know him in their lives here; also how could that be and they haven’t seen him?

Lord Jesus says to the good “For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink”, then he mentions other situations where he says that he was in although he didn’t personally pass in any of these situations. They reply and say: “when did we see you hungry or needing clothes or in prison, and did not help you?” The Lord replies: “whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me”. This means that he was hungry through the hungry person, a stranger through strangers, and sick through the sick people; i.e. he united himself with every person in need. “No one has ever seen God”, you see him through the hungry, the prisoner and the sick.

If you didn’t love a brother in need, you can’t love Christ, while if you did love him then you have truly loved Christ. Principally, if you gave the hungry and visited the sick and the imprisoned you would have also done this to Christ.

The opposite of taking care of people, is the act of overlooking and ignoring the other and being stingy with your compassion. Stinginess isn’t only found when you don’t give money to the needy, but also when you don’t give him love, and when you leave the sick and the imprisoned in their solitude. You know that the lonely or the left alone person recovers when others accept him; he feels that he does exist. Sickness is not only pain or fever, but it is the feeling of separation from others.

Christ calls all these ignored people the least of his brothers and sisters, and the word least comes from the way people look unto them. If we neglected compassion, the act of being close to the weak and making them ascend to a higher status through our humility, we would have neglected the Lord himself and went away from him. Therefore, we shall go to an eternal suffering.

The meaning aimed here is not only hell that waits for us after resurrection, but the fact that we would be thrown into a conscience suffering in this world. We would be neglected from Christ. While if we came close to the people who are in need, we would feel that Lord Jesus has also come close to us.

Heaven is a communion not only with God, but also with those that we loved and made them ascend to their Lord through love. Heaven is the communion of saints. In the Kingdom sadness vanishes, we dwell in happiness and each one of us dwells with the other and sees his face full of happiness. While in hell, our Fathers say that no one sees the face of others but everyone is tied to the back of the other.

This image indicates that there is no communion in hell, and that no one is a brother to anyone. In the feelings of brotherhood, we shall enter the doors of the Great Lent where we deprive ourselves for the sake of the poor and as a support for them until Pascha comes for all of us in happiness and the power of communion.

Before entering the Lent we should examine our hearts and see if they were contaminated, because in that case fasting will not benefit us. We will be in front of the judgment that today’s Gospel talks about where Jesus reveals himself as a judge. The image of the judgment is that there is a differentiation between those who have done good deeds and those who haven’t. The Lord called the good ones “blessed”, and when he knew that they will do good deeds he prepared for them the kingdom since the creation of the world, this means that they will reign with Christ. These people knew him in their lives here; but how could that be and they haven’t seen him? The evil didn’t know him in their lives here; also how could that be and they haven’t seen him?

Lord Jesus says to the good “For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink”, then he mentions other situations where he says that he was in although he didn’t personally pass in any of these situations. They reply and say: “when did we see you hungry or needing clothes or in prison, and did not help you?” The Lord replies: “whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me”. This means that he was hungry through the hungry person, a stranger through strangers, and sick through the sick people; i.e. he united himself with every person in need. “No one has ever seen God”, you see him through the hungry, the prisoner and the sick.

If you didn’t love a brother in need, you can’t love Christ, while if you did love him then you have truly loved Christ. Principally, if you gave the hungry and visited the sick and the imprisoned you would have also done this to Christ.

The opposite of taking care of people, is the act of overlooking and ignoring the other and being stingy with your compassion. Stinginess isn’t only found when you don’t give money to the needy, but also when you don’t give him love, and when you leave the sick and the imprisoned in their solitude. You know that the lonely or the left alone person recovers when others accept him; he feels that he does exist. Sickness is not only pain or fever, but it is the feeling of separation from others.

Christ calls all these ignored people the least of his brothers and sisters, and the word least comes from the way people look unto them. If we neglected compassion, the act of being close to the weak and making them ascend to a higher status through our humility, we would have neglected the Lord himself and went away from him. Therefore, we shall go to an eternal suffering.

The meaning aimed here is not only hell that waits for us after resurrection, but the fact that we would be thrown into a conscience suffering in this world. We would be neglected from Christ. While if we came close to the people who are in need, we would feel that Lord Jesus has also come close to us.

Heaven is a communion not only with God, but also with those that we loved and made them ascend to their Lord through love. Heaven is the communion of saints. In the Kingdom sadness vanishes, we dwell in happiness and each one of us dwells with the other and sees his face full of happiness. While in hell, our Fathers say that no one sees the face of others but everyone is tied to the back of the other.

This image indicates that there is no communion in hell, and that no one is a brother to anyone. In the feelings of brotherhood, we shall enter the doors of the Great Lent where we deprive ourselves for the sake of the poor and as a support for them until Pascha comes for all of us in happiness and the power of communion.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “أحد الدينونة” – 27.02.2011

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The Prodigal Son / 20.02.2011

Jesus spoke a lot about repentance, and here he makes a story that reflects this teaching. The parable or story is the following: A man had two sons; the young one asked to take his share of the inheritance and leave his parental house, while the other didn’t want his share but wanted to stay in the house. The young son took all his belongings and lived in a far country in profligacy. He spent all his money as a famine happened in the county so he tried to live with some money he makes from his job but his earning wasn’t enough.

He thought about returning to the family house and telling his father that he is his son, which means confessing his sins. When he became close to the house his father saw him. Was he on a balcony or on a high roof at the end of the road? Was he still not hopeless concerning the return of his son? Did he expect that the son will fall into an economical loss since he went to spend and not to make a fortune?

“His father saw him and had compassion, and ran and fell on his neck and kissed him”. He did not reprove him, or blame him, or tell him that the good behavior is better than the bad one. He only hugged him and gave him the best robe to wear since his clothes were torn apart like every hungry person as he won’t have money to buy clothes. He butchered the fatted Calf for him and told the servants: “for this my son was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found”. He called him his son, i.e. he didn’t cut the relationship between them.

There was in the house dancing and singing, so the son that remained free was surprised and got mad because he considered that his father was unjust, so he separated his self spiritually from the family and did not want to enter, and he started to blame his father and consider himself righteous. How is the bad person treated as the pure one? How could he prefer the son the fell over the one who didn’t? This is what he was thinking about. Is the punishment of the adulterer to be treated just like the one who remained pure?

The Father had another logic: I treat the righteous as the owner of the house. He eats, drinks and enjoys everything in the house. He can enjoy everything to the maximum, but he isn’t allowed to punish his brother. The money belongs to the father and he is free to do what he wants with it. The father didn’t prevent anything from the old son. He didn’t deny anything from him. The fatted Cult is for him, the ring and the sandals also, and he has the right to give these to whoever has deviated or gone away.

The father’s heart wanted to save his rebellious son and tell him that he still loves him. The father felt that his little son was like a dead person and the Gospel did call him dead.

This parable that was named “the prodigal son” in our tradition should be named -taking into consideration both sons- the parable of “the compassionate father” that forgave the son that has rebelled and treated the old son justly. He treated each one in a way but in one love. Jesus came to save sinners, and he distinguished them only for them to feel and repent and return to the face of the heavenly Father.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “الابن الشاطر” – 20.02.2011

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The Pharisee and the Tax Collector / 13.02.11

When this Sunday comes, we feel that we became close to the Lent. This day starts the period of “Triodon”, which is the book that contains the biblical texts that precede the lent and ends when by entering Pascha.

The scene talks about two people that went up to the temple in Jerusalem to pray, one was a Pharisee and the other was a tax collector. We have mentioned previously that the Pharisees were from a very strict religious party concerning the issue of keeping the Law; they even added new restrictions that weren’t found in the Law. Jesus had several confrontations with these people because they were hypocrites. The Savior was not against their theological problems especially that they agree with Jesus since they teach about resurrection, while other Jews didn’t believe in resurrection. The Lord was against their behavior and pride.

The other person was a tax collector to the Romans; it was known that tax collectors used to steal from the taxes and don’t pay all the money to the authorities.

The Pharisee was bragging in front of the tax collector and accusing him with corruption and injustice. He was bragging that he fasts twice a week although Moses’ Law didn’t ask for this, and also that he gives tithes of what he owns although it was also not asked to give tithes of simple material such us vegetables and fruits.

On the other side, the sinner tax collector stands with his eyes upon the ground, asking for forgiveness as he says: “God, be merciful to me a sinner”.

This is a biblical parable, i.e. a story that Jesus told in order to give the Jews a lesson, and this is what he does by saying that the tax collector went down to his house justified rather than the other, and he continues: “for everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted”.

Therefore, we start in this Sunday that prepares for the Lent with a lesson about humility. Fasting has no value without humility. No one can be proud about his fasting. A person can be proud about the mercy that descends on him from God and forgives his sins. Do not boast about anything you have done because, as St. Basil the great says in his liturgy, “we haven’t done any good in front of God”.

Apostle Paul has said that when a person considers himself something, therefore he is nothing. Only God could exalt us while being on earth. He exalts us through his love and forgiveness. He who considers himself “nothing”, his Lord will make him “something”. The Savior taught us this with insistence when he said: “Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart”. It is asked to have smoothness in relations with people, kindness in treating others by trying not to hurt anyone or make a person sad, and make, through love, others happy at all times.

Let us consider the coming Lent a season of returning to God, a deep return coming from the depth of our hearts so that no one dwells in this heart except the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit; through this we shall see the trinity dwelling in our hearts in the Holy Week and Pascha.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “الفريسي والعشار” – 13.02.11

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The believer is the Temple of God / 06.02.11

Paul goes beyond the physical temple of Jerusalem, as the Lord did, and teaches the Corinthians that they (through Baptism, sacraments, faith, and everything given in the New Testament) are a living temple of God. His words were not weird from the Old Testament, but were built on it through our Lord Jesus Christ (See for example Ezekiel 37: 27 and Jeremiah 25: 11).

“I will dwell in them and walk among them”; this phrase refers to the exodus from Egypt under Moses’ leadership. However, the true leader is God that made his people cross the wilderness of Sinai into the land of Canaanites (Palestine). This phrase is also in the future tense; but, God’s true dwelling in us and walking among us is not a transition from a place to another but from a state of sin slavery into another of salvation through Jesus Christ.

What did he mean by his old saying to the Hebrews: “Come out from among them”? Come out to where? This doesn’t mean, of course, to build a political kingdom by putting all foreigners out; this is practically impossible. It meant to leave their actions, and to build a faithful community which is the church that is spread all over the world as it was meant to do through the Lord’s saying: “Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations”. You shall be special through your love for people in the church and outside it. I said the word “special” because love is the only basis of Christian ethics. You are in a constant state of renewal.

The question here is the following: If the Savior said clearly that we are a living temple of God, then why do we still build temples? Historically, Christianity did not know any temples in the first two centuries because the faithful used to gather in one place of a village or in an alley of the city and have liturgy there. The first built church was in Tyr. The idea of consecration of churches also came late. The sacredness of the church comes from the Holy Book, which, when read in the church, makes the place a platform for God’s word. This is why Preaching becomes necessary in order to explain the word of God or deliver it to the faithful. Sacredness also comes from the Holy Liturgy and all the sacraments.

The reality of our churches is that they are huge halls that people had to build in order to be together. Being together means to gather on the day of resurrection, Sunday, and this is our purpose to become “Resurrectionists”.

After that, reality showed that every large street needs a church, as it is impossible for all the faithful to gather in the Cathedral. However, sometimes churches are not made due to this need but because of the piety of a rich person who wants to build a church and give it the name of his Patron saint. This is well known in our Archdiocese.

Our churches and their beauty should not make us forget that we, people, are the church of Christ before anything. Before the end of the Soviet Union, in 1920’s, the number of churches decreased to four and then became ten in the time of Khrushchev; however, Orthodox people were still there. Who of us really cares about being a living member in the body of Christ, carrying the Bible in his mind and heart and speaking about it? If we were not together and moving together through the Word, then we would only have physical stone temples and not Churches.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “المؤمن هيكل الله” – 06.02.11

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The Sick / 05.02.2011

Sickness! When we do not see it as a situation in which God is revealed, it remains as that which damages Man. Yet, sickness can be a capacity for being transformed from a being a state of decline to one of encountering God’s mercy.  And thus one waits for what might remain in him and what might go. And this waiting is not one of dilemmatic suffering but that of the bliss of receiving mercy. And mercy is not so unless it comes from God. And this is bestowed by Him and received by us so that our yearning for Him becomes stronger.

If you believe in Grace you are able to see things. You strive to earn good health because you believe it is the sign of wholeness. But wholeness is not only in the well being of the body. There is always a frailty that appears in us which makes us turn to God allowing Him to have a stronger grip on us. And because the frailty in one is different from that in the other, the relationship that God has with each of us is unique; yet we know that our common meeting place is in His great mercy.

The bestowing of this strength on us can become a crisis in that we do not see sometimes what life is in its reality. At times we are far from the thoughts that God has for us. For example, in the story of the paralytic, Jesus says to him: “Your sins are forgiven.” Yet what was wanted was the healing of the body, while Jesus was concerned for the healing of the whole being, a healing that can take place through repentance. As such sickness, if it leads us to repentance, is a blessing.

An illness can be ascension to contemplate His holy face. At times you ask one about his health and he answers with a deep down conviction and honesty that “he is well”; that person is definitely often close to God. One like this sees with God’s light. That is what the matter is about.

But not all sickness is a visitation from the Divine Presence. The case is so when one is treading the road of holiness even if it is for a time. In this the intercessions of those in Sainthood comes down on us; our existence then goes beyond the corporal having been assumed by the sanctifying Spirit into Real Being.

The Sick is held in honor in the Gospel since Jesus says” I was sick and you visited me not” as he said “I was hungry and you did not give me to eat”. That implies that Jesus is in those who are sick and is one with them. The person who is bedridden in pain is not alone; his companion in He who has been ridden on the Cross and trampled down under unjust humanity.  One can hear Jesus say to every one whose health has been damaged: “l am with you to the Holies to bind you to my Spirit so that you will become something other than this damaged body; you would dwell in the compassion of God to walk the path of His resurrection so that your resurrection will be consummated on a day God appoints for you in His wisdom when He bestows upon you the grace of death as a window to the True Light”. And when you say to the Father in full surrender “your will be done” then the Holy Spirit will take His abode in the depth of your heart; and at that True Knowledge begins.

Myriads and myriads of the sick in the world lift you with their suffering when you become one of them since they are one in misery and many are one in intercession because God is with those who are broken. They are the excellent ones in the people of God and also those chosen for his love. God prepares for His glory the sick who strive and struggle and are patient till the end for there is no healing for them until they get to Heaven.

With such a vision of sickness there is no point in asking why we fall sick. You get to realize, during your ordeal and after you are healed, the sanctifying presence of God and His union with you; and that is so in the illness you think is “the abyss”; but with God you discover it is not so.

Every man is sick at heart and awaits corruptibility since the day he is born.  That is characteristic of our nature, in its moral and physical aspect and through this corruption we head towards death. This brokenness indicates weakness in our daily lives. Blessed is he who considers himself broken and weak. That could be a lesson in humility and knowledge that helps us manage our earthly lives with what we succeed in or fail in.

Looking at man as he is, I find him weak in his body and wounded in his spirit. As someone told me jokingly: “All of us are three percent insane at the start”. And when I read the psychological analysis I understood that no human being is free of neurosis. According to that the world is an insane asylum and we have to live together as we are all insane to a certain extent.

This wounded humanity is loved by us despite its limitations, falls and tears. We can improve ourselves through education and medicine. Also through consecration and sacrifice we give ourselves to the poor among the sick; those that are abandoned and uninsured in many countries.

Humanity is then in a perennial state of cure and recovery; and in a state of prayer when hope is envisioned. Those strong in the Lord take care of the weak thus those given and those who give receive support. And in this struggle we do not forget our brethren the insane and those with psychological handicaps.

It is important that those who are injured do not withdraw to themselves so that they can remain in a state where they can give to their peers and to those who are “healthy” so that humanity is fulfilled through love and prayer. The increase of ordeals in life does not imply a belittlement of existence.  The decline in our corporeal nature is not the issue; the catastrophe is the breakdown of our being. Death itself is not the catastrophe; death is only a “veiling” of our existence because the reality is in the resurrection from the dead in which we have our consolation even when sickness is destroying that (the body) through which death reveals itself. The comparison is not between life and death; but the option is between the breakdown in one’s being or its wellness in that God becomes the “all” of that being and as such you are lifted up by God. This happens only if you get the “support” of the poor and the sick, the little brothers of Jesus.

Why did Jesus give much attention to the sick so much to the point of performing miracles on them and preaching the good news to them as it came in the Bible in Matthew 4: 23, 24:”And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the people. And his fame went throughout all Syria: and they brought unto him all sick people that were taken with divers diseases and torments, and those which were possessed with devils, and those which were lunatic, and those that had the palsy; and he healed them.”

What was Jesus’ motive in performing miracles? Matthew 9:35, 36 makes that clear: “Then Jesus went about all the cities and villages, teaching in their synagogues, preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing every sickness and every disease among the people. But when He saw the multitudes, He was moved with compassion for them, because they were weary and scattered, like sheep having no shepherd.”

You receive God’s compassion in good health and ill health because regardless of your state, you yearn for the companionship of the Savior. Your ultimate concern is the Lord’s closeness to you above that of the world.

Has closeness to God been obtained; that’s in God’s hands. Every believer awaits the Day of Judgment with faith that he will not be condemned. He trusts that he will not be brought to judgment for fear that he would be condemned because his life is to be in God’s presence accepting His blame and fearing death. That is why he prays.

All these thoughts cross the mind of the sick person.  Those with good health might not find themselves in such a confrontation leading them to think that they are fine with God. One questions whether the sick have the grace of reflecting on God and one’s judgment. One also wonders at the implication and meaning of “lead us not into temptation”.

No doubt that physical weakness can bring us to contemplate death and the resulting fear due to it. Even Jesus dreaded that. Death is a serious issue and I know of those who do not dread it; those who believe in the resurrection of Jesus.

O Lord lift from us the burden of fear.

Translated by Riad Moufarrij

Original Text: “المريض” – 05.02.2011

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2011, Articles, Raiati

Zacchaeus the Tax Collector / 31.01.11

He was the chief of tax collectors; he was responsible for the taxes paid for the Romans: The Roman authority assigns him and in exchange he pays a certain amount of money, he assigns assistants that help him in collecting taxes from people. These collectors used to choose the amount of taxes according to their will, this way they used to make huge personal extra profits. For example, the chief of tax collectors in Jericho could be assigned and asked for ten thousand Dinars, so he goes on, collects twenty thousand and keeps the difference in his pocket.

Zacchaeus the tax collector was the chief of collectors in Jericho. The Gospel says that he was a rich man, but doesn’t say that he was a thief like most tax collectors in the Roman authority.

Zacchaeus had the curiosity to see Jesus when he knew that the Lord was meant to pass through Jericho. Did he just have curiosity to see a personality that has become famous in the country, or was there more spiritual depth?

All that we know is that he made an effort as he climbed a sycamore tree in order to see Jesus because he was of short stature. Did Luke purposely describe Zacchaeus as short and tell us that he climbed a sycamore in order to show us that we have to overcome all spiritual difficulties in us if we wanted to meet Jesus?

When Jesus saw Zacchaeus sitting on the tree branch, he told him: “Zacchaeus, make haste and come down, for today I must stay at your house”. The Lord wanted to go into a conversation with the man that would take hours of the night.

Here the Gospel said: “So he made haste and came down”, it didn’t simply say “he came down”. He did exactly what Jesus wanted him to do. Then it says: “he received him joyfully”. Zacchaeus knew that this new teacher had things from God to say, words for his repentance. After entering the house, the shocking word from Zacchaeus came: “Look, Lord, I give half of my goods to the poor; and if I have taken anything from anyone by false accusation, I restore fourfold”.

Who gives half of his goods to the poor? And why “fourfold”? Doesn’t this mean that he was afraid not to return everything he might have taken by false accusation through tax collecting?

After that, the saving verse comes from Lord Jesus: “Today salvation has come to this household”. Today, through the repentance of this man his old life is ended. Then the promise comes: “for the son of man has come to seek and to save that which was lost”. No person could be considered convicted or lost if he loved the Lord more than every humanly thing in him.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “زكا العشار” – 31.01.11

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2011, Articles, Raiati

“Sinners of Whom I am Chief” / 23.01.11

Who is this Timothy, the person that two letters were sent to? From the book of Acts we see that Paul met him in Lystra and made him his best helper. His father was Greek, which means Gentile, while his mother was a Jew that became Christian. Timothy studied the Holy Books (the Old Testament) since his childhood.

Timothy used to have health problems (malaises) so Paul took care of his health and circumcised him in order to avoid problems caused by Judaizers. He was ordained by church elders. This epistle is one of the Pastoral Epistles that reflect Paul’s theology.

In the first epistle to Timothy, his teacher Paul says that “This is a faithful word and worthy of all acceptance”; this word is the word that the apostle used to teach and he calls it his Gospel that he took directly from the Lord when he appeared to him on the “correct road“. The content of this Gospel is that Christ came to save sinners, each one of us, as Paul introduces himself as “the chief” of the sinners. This is the way every one of us should speak about himself since no one is allowed to compare himself with others saying that he’s better than them through this or that virtue; we have to consider ourselves the last between people because only Lord can condemn people according to “my gospel” – as Paul says – in Jesus Christ.

No person can say about himself anything except that mercy descends to him and saves him from all his sins. If God gave him his mercy, this would be through his patience. Therefore, when people see God’s mercy on a person, they know that it could also come to them and they will gain eternal life that starts in Baptism and stays with us through all the Holy Sacraments and faith.

“Now to the king eternal, immortal, invisible, to God who alone is wise, be honor and glory forever and ever”. This is the act (movement) of us being “caught up” to him through praise. The first movement towards God is request and asking. For if we obtained this request that would be for our salvation, we thank God, and this is the second movement towards him. After that, the only thing left is praise.

These three movements are prayer. We ask God what’s for our salvation. We can ask for health and means of living, but without forgetting that it should only be leading us to God. Health, food and drinking are not purposes; they are ways for the salvation and purification of the soul. Through this we dwell with God in this world and the coming one. Being in a daily relation with God is the salvation itself.

To live in the request of forgiveness and humility is a result to what the Lord said: “Men always ought to pray”. We cannot pray all the time, but we ask the Lord to raise our hearts to him all the time; and this is a speechless prayer. If we reached this level of relation with the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, we shall be in heaven from now, we become a home for God, free from all harmful lusts, and attracted to the face of the Father who is the beginning and the end.

This is not accomplished for anyone unless he considers himself like Paul did “last between people”, i.e. when he becomes humble and this is the virtue of all virtues. Humility qualifies us to say with Paul that “Christ Jesus came into the world to save the sinners, of whom I am chief”. Then, God will raise us to his throne.

Translated by Mark Najjar

Original Text: “الخطأة الذين أنا أولهم” –Raiati no4- 23.01.11

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