December 31, 2025

2026 Pastoral Encyclical for the New Year (Metr. Hierotheos of Nafpaktos)

 
 
Pastoral Encyclical

Sacred Metropolis of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

New Year's Day 2026

Beloved children in the Lord,

I am communicating with you on this great day of the feast of the Circumcision of our Lord Jesus Christ and the beginning of the new civil year along with the feast of Saint Basil the Great, and I extend to you my warm wishes for a blessed new year, with health, both physical and spiritual, and every good gift from God, pleasing and perfect. On this day the Church has appointed that, during the Divine Liturgy, a reading be proclaimed from the Epistle of the Apostle Paul to the Colossians, which refers to the difference between the philosophy of this world and theology — a difference of great and central importance in our lives (Col. 2:8–12).

Philosophy is characterized as “empty deceit,” as “the tradition of men,” and as “the elements of the world,” and “not according to Christ.” Humanity has always looked upon the existing world and, on the one hand, sought to interpret it — what it is, that is, what its ontology is, why it exists, and ultimately how it came to be or who created it. Thus, from ancient Greece various philosophical schools developed, before and after Socrates, and also after Plato and Aristotle, down to our own days. The center of philosophy is human reason, with its deductions and imagination, by which the gaps of reasoning are filled.

New Year's Day at Agia Paraskevi (Photios Kontoglou)

"Kydonies Agia Paraskevi," early 20th-century photograph

New Year’s Day, as Photios Kontoglou remembered it, at his estate in Agia Paraskevi of Aivali (Ayvalik).

NEW YEAR’S DAY AT AGIA PARASKEVI

By Photios Kontoglou

Agia Paraskevi was the name of a monastery, but in truth it was an estate, administered by the abbot. It had neither monks nor the other things monasteries usually have. The abbot and his clan governed the surrounding mountains, the olive groves, the fields, the gardens, the pastures, the salt pans, the sea, and the livestock. The abbot was ordained from within the family — the most educated and the most honored — and this had been done so from grandfather to great-grandfather.

The abbot and his people lived in a true fortress with high walls, which contained many rooms, kitchens, ovens, storerooms, mills, and at the center stood the Church of Saint Paraskevi. This enchanted fortress was built atop a mountain surrounded by the sea on three sides, and at its summit there was a rock such as one would not find elsewhere, of such strange form and such size. The fortress was built at its base, toward the south.

Homily for New Year's Eve (Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh)


AT THE GATE OF THE YEAR

December 31, 1981

By Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh

In the Name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Before we pray, I should like to introduce our prayers so that when we pray, we do it more effectively, with one mind and with one heart. Year after year I have spoken of the New Year that was coming, in terms of a plain covered with snow, unspoiled, pure, and called our attention to the fact that we must tread responsibly on this expanse of whiteness still unspoiled, because according to the way in which we tread it, there will be a road cutting through the plain following the will of God, or wandering steps that will only soil the whiteness of the snow. But a thing that we cannot, must not forget, this year perhaps more than on many previous occasions, is that, surrounding, covering this whiteness and this unknown as with a dome, there is darkness, a darkness with few or many stars, but a darkness, dense, opaque, dangerous and frightening. We come out of a year when darkness has been perceived by all of us, when violence and cruelty are still rife.

December: Day 31: Teaching 2: On the Eve of the New Year


December: Day 31: Teaching 3:
On the Eve of the New Year

 
(One More Year!)

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko

I. At the coming of the new year, I find it very timely, brethren, to offer to your love the parable of Jesus Christ about the barren fig tree.

“Jesus Christ spoke this parable: A certain man had a fig tree planted in his vineyard; and he came seeking fruit on it and found none. Then he said to the vinedresser, ‘Behold, for three years now I have come seeking fruit on this fig tree and find none. Cut it down; why should it even exhaust the soil?’ But he answered and said to him, ‘Sir, leave it alone this year also, until I dig around it and fertilize it. And if it bears fruit, well; but if not, then next year you may cut it down’” (Luke 13:6–9).

A new year has come, my brethren.

On the Eve of the Nativity of Christ and the New Year (Fr. Michael Pomazansky)

 
On the Eve of the Nativity of Christ and the New Year 

By Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky

(Delivered in 1957)

“God is with us!” Already the Orthodox Christian breathes in the life-giving stream of sacred memories. Already the soul is being filled with the festive church hymns that glorify the descent of God to earth — and the love and closeness of God are felt more keenly. In these days people will stand closer to one another in the churches, and in doing so will also draw nearer to one another in their hearts.

More vividly there come to mind the homeland and the images of the celebration of the Nativity of Christ in church, in the family, and in the life of the people. More sharply the thought of loved ones left behind there responds in the heart, and the breast sighs more deeply over all that has been painfully abandoned there to the mercy of fate.

Now we are in a foreign land. Yet we bless this sojourn abroad, where we are free in conscience and in thought. The Lord has preserved us! The sense of our personal preservation resonates with the Church’s doxology: God’s good pleasure is with us. God is with us.

2013 Pastoral Encyclical for Christmas (Metr. Hierotheos of Nafpaktos)


Pastoral Encyclical

Sacred Metropolis of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

Christmas 2012

The Love of Christ

The day of Christmas is a warm and blessed day, because we feel the love of Christ, who became man in order to meet us after our apostasy and our departure from Paradise. We were wounded by sin, and He came as a physician to heal us; we were in exile, and He came as a friend to our land; we were in despair, and He brought us hope; we had deep pain of soul and body, and He gave us joy. How can a person not love such a God — who loves, who is born as a man in a cave, who passes through the malice of men, who is forced to live as a refugee in Egypt, who experiences all the tragic conditions of life that humanity endured, and who finally sacrifices Himself to save us?

Saint Melania the Roman in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

Saint Melania lived during the reign of Honorius and came from a noble and illustrious family. Because she loved the Lord with all her soul, she desired to live a virginal life. Her parents, however, pressured her and, against her will, led her into marriage, from which she had two children. Later, her parents and her children departed from this life, and the Saint left the Rome and went to live in a suburb. There she devoted herself to hospitality toward strangers who came, and to visiting prisoners and exiles.

After this, having sold her great property and gathered twelve myriads of gold, she distributed money to monasteries and churches, while she herself ate every two days, then every five days, so that in the end she ate only on Saturday and Sunday. She also had the gift of writing skillfully and intelligently. She lived in Africa for seven years, and after scattering her great wealth, she reached Alexandria. From there she went to Jerusalem, where she enclosed herself in a cell. She gathered around herself ninety virgins, for whom she continually provided all that was necessary for their life.

At a certain time she was suddenly seized by pain in her side and became gravely ill. She then summoned the Bishop of Eleutheropolis and received Holy Communion from him. And after she had gathered all the sisters, she uttered this saying as her final word: "As it seemed good to the Lord, so it came to pass." And immediately she surrendered her spirit to the Lord.


December: Day 31: Teaching 6: Saint Zotikos the Feeder of Orphans


December: Day 31: Teaching 6:*
Saint Zotikos the Feeder of Orphans

 
(What Does It Mean To Take Care of an Orphan?)

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko

I. Saint Zotikos, whose memory the Holy Church celebrates today, is distinguished among the saints by the special title of "Feeder of Orphans." Pleasing God with all the virtues required by God's law of anyone seeking salvation, the Saint especially dedicated himself to serving orphans, to whom he was a true father and provider. 

The Holy Martyr Zotikos lived in the 4th century A.D., first in Rome, then he moved to Constantinople. He was known to Emperor Constantine the Great, from whom he repeatedly received financial donations for charitable works. Possessing considerable wealth himself, Saint Zotikos rejected this wealth and all the worldly, vain honors that awaited him in his ministry, accepted the rank of priest, and set himself the task of serving the poor orphans and widows. He opened his home in Constantinople to all the homeless, sheltering them from heat and cold and assisting them in their dire need with all possible means. Thus, during his life, Saint Zotikos wiped away many bitter tears, comforted many, and saved many poor and orphaned people from spiritual and physical ruin. For this, the Lord crowned him with the crown of heavenly glory and eternal blessedness, deigning him to end his life as a martyr for denouncing the heresy of Arius under Emperor Constantius.

II. Following the example of Saint Zotikos the Feeder of Orphans, let us, brethren, also be concerned with the care of orphans, especially since this is directly commanded by the word of God. In the New Testament, caring for widows and orphans is placed as the most important act of Christian faith and piety. "Pure and undefiled religion before God," says Saint James, "is this: to visit orphans and widows in their affliction" (James 1:27).

But what does it mean to take care of an orphan?

a) To look after an orphan means to enable him to acquire the necessities of life himself, to make him capable of honest and useful work. For an orphan, there is no warmth greater than that of a mother's love, which could warm his heart and awaken in him holy feelings of love for God and neighbor, meekness and patience, modesty and chastity, mercy and compassion — which could enliven and inspire him with the spirit of faith and trust in God, the spirit of prayer and devotion to God's will. Having looked after an orphan, let him experience the sweetness and warmth of maternal and, in general, parental love, with all the innumerable beneficial consequences for his religious and moral education and truly Christian life. If you do not allow an orphan to die of hunger and cold, if one gives him bread, another some clothing, a third some money, then you have still not looked after him. What good will these casual, indifferent alms, seemingly forced by the petitioner's importunity, do to the orphan? Will not the easy method of acquiring wealth through begging accustom him to laziness, idleness, vagrancy, and shamelessness? If the alms are abundant, will they not serve as an excuse for frivolous and useless spending, for intemperance, debauchery, and licentiousness? If, on the contrary, the alms are meager, will they not develop a passion for supplementing them by theft or other dishonest means? Isn't this precisely how most of the unfortunates who fill our prisons are formed in our societies? It is a sacred duty to give alms to the beggar, but the most precious thing is to place the needy in a position where they can satisfy their own needs and not be forced to beg for alms from others, which is sometimes more difficult and bitter than enduring poverty and grief. It is a good deed to feed the hungry or clothe the naked; but, without a doubt, it is better and more beneficial to ensure that both are able and know how to obtain food and clothing themselves, without having to knock on doors or abuse the most holy name of Christ. If our charity were to forever adopt this truly Christian direction, if general sympathy, especially for orphans, were always expressed in this truly brotherly assistance, then the homeless orphan would not become savage, corrupt, or a rotten and harmful member of society, a burden to himself and others; then the homeless youth would not give himself over to idleness and debauchery and become a scourge on society, but would be an active and useful member. Thus, caring for an orphan with the goal of his upbringing, that is a truly good and holy deed! That is a truly Christian endeavor, which the Lord our God Himself places upon us! "You are to leave bread for the poor, and be a helper to the orphan," thus He speaks from heaven to each of us.

b) What does it mean, further, to look after an orphan? It means to replace his parents, his biological father and mother. Can this be achieved without tender, familial love for him? No matter how much you caress an orphan, if your caresses don't sparkle with true, genuine love, they will leave a chill, and the young, tender, receptive heart of the child will feel this chill. No matter what wise instructions you give your young charge, if they don't ring with sincere, heartfelt love and don't touch the tender strings of the young heart, they will fly right past his ears, skim the surface of his soul, and be forgotten faster than you can finish them. Then the reward for all your labors will be mere polite, but not heartfelt, gratitude. Much less will a warm, heartfelt prayer be raised to God for you, or a fervent tear of gratitude be shed before the Heavenly Father — all your labor will remain fruitless. Instead, be inspired by sincere Christian love for these little ones. Then the tender heart of a child will be drawn to yours as by a magnet, will submit completely to your influence, and will cling to you with its ardent love. Your advice and guidance will deepen in their soul, take root, grow, and bear good fruit, always guarding them from error and vice. But even if the storms of life blow upon him with their corrupting breath, disturb his soul and heart with impure passions, and draw him down the perilous path of vice, the memory of your love will awaken his conscience, soften his heart, draw from his chest a heavy sigh of remorse, and draw from his eyes a tear of remorse. Are there many examples where the mere memory of a kind, loving mother has brought the most hardened villains to repentance? Oh, what a precious service to humanity this is! What a truly sacred deed of love and at the same time the most precious reward of love!

c) What does it mean, finally, to look after an orphan? It means to preserve in his soul the grace of Holy Baptism, to develop, direct, and train all the powers of his soul and body, sealed with the gift of the Holy Spirit, for proper activity; it means to raise the child into a true Christian, a son of the Church of Christ, a man of God, prepared for every good work. Here, pious educators of orphans, you become servants not of nature, but of the grace of God; you replace for the orphan not his earthly parents, but the Heavenly Father, Who, entrusting to you His children adopted by Him in Holy Baptism, promises and grants you His divine grace to help. You are taking the place of their heavenly Mother, the most holy and most blessed Queen of heaven and earth, who, having chosen you as her co-workers, entrusts to your care that which is most precious on our earth — the Christian child washed and sanctified by the blood of her Son. Do you feel the full height of your calling, the full grandeur of your service in the Kingdom of God, the full glory of the reward prepared for you, and the full weight of the answer before the Judgment of God for these little ones? "It is not the will of my Father that one of these little ones should perish," says our Lord Jesus Christ. "Take heed therefore lest ye despise one of these little ones." If by our care and concern they are preserved for the Kingdom of God, if, at least, from your own hands you deliver them into the hands of God's Providence, into the midst of Christian society, pure and blameless, prepared for every good work; then with what a bright and joyful face you will appear before the throne of God and say: “Here I am and the children whom You have given me, Lord!” 

III. With what treasures and rewards will the Heavenly Father not reward you for these little ones! With what honor will the Son of God not honor you in His Kingdom! With what heavenly joys will the Most Holy Mother of God not console you! With what joy will the holy angels of these little ones meet you, embrace you, and lead you into the heavenly dwellings, who see your cares and concerns for them, read in your hearts the Christian love for them, and are themselves ready with love to help you!

Source: A Complete Annual Cycle of Short Teachings, Composed for Each Day of the Year. Translated by John Sanidopoulos.   

Notes: 

* In the original Russian text, Saint Zotikos is commemorated on December 30th, and there this reading is placed under Teaching 1. To conform it to the Greek calendar, the translation of the text was moved to December 31st and there it is placed as Teaching 6.
 

Saint Melania the Roman Resource Page

Prologue in Sermons: December 31


It is Not Right to Judge a Person’s Afterlife by the Condition of the Body After Death

December 31
 
(A Saying From the Paterikon About a Certain Holy Elderly Woman and Ascetic)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

When someone dies, some of the ignorant judge the state of that person’s soul by whether the body has decomposed or not before burial. If it has remained intact, they think that such a person pleased God; but if otherwise, they are convinced that the deceased angered God and must go to hell. That those who judge in this way are mistaken is shown by the following account of Venerable Ammon concerning a certain holy elderly woman and ascetic.

“I knew,” he says, “a holy hermitess who spent a very long time withdrawn from the world in fasting and prayer. Once, in answer to my question as to what had caused her to part from the world, she replied thus:

December 30, 2025

The Meaning of Christmas and Its Obscuration (Fr. George Metallinos)


The Meaning of Christmas and Its Obscuration 

By Protopresbyter Fr. George Metallinos

With His incarnation and His birth, the God-man Jesus Christ fulfills the purpose of the creation of man: the manifestation of the God-man in history, the union of the created creature with the Uncreated Creator. The purpose of the Incarnation is the deification (theosis) of man.

“Man becomes God, so that Adam may attain God.” (Christmas troparion).

“He became man so that we might be deified” (Saint Athanasios the Great).

“For God became man and man became God” (Saint John Chrysostom).

Within the logic of a moralist, the term “that we might be deified,” which Fathers such as Saint Athanasios use, is a scandal. For this reason they speak of a so-called “moral deification.” This is because they fear accepting that through deification there occurs, “by grace,” what the Triune God is “by nature” (uncreated, without beginning, immortal).

2012 Pastoral Encyclical for Christmas (Metr. Hierotheos of Nafpaktos)


Pastoral Encyclical

Sacred Metropolis of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

Christmas 2012

Beloved brethren,

We glorify God and thank Him for His great gift: that He loved the world — especially mankind — and revealed this love abundantly. The Son and Word of God, with the good pleasure of the Father and the cooperation of the Holy Spirit, became man; He assumed our human nature and deified it, without departing from His divinity. We also glorify God and the Church, which has filled our lives with these divine gifts — that is, the feasts of the Nativity of Christ, the Circumcision of Christ, and the Holy Theophany, the Baptism of Christ in the River Jordan. In these days we will once again experience the great love of God toward all of us, provided that we possess the necessary conditions to understand it.

Homily on the Occasion of the First Official Celebration of Saint Chrysostomos Papasarantopoulos


Homily by Archimandrite Philippos Chamargias,
Protosyncellus of the Holy Metropolis of Messinia,
on the Occasion of the First Official Celebration of Saint Chrysostomos,
Missionary to Africa, Native of Messinia


(Delivered on December 29, 2025)

Our Holy Church has a feast every day; each day she honors and celebrates a saint. In the three hundred and sixty-five days of the year, we encounter thousands of saints of our faith.

Among them, like a star, there now shines in the firmament of our Church the saint honored today — Saint Chrysostomos, the Missionary to Africa, our compatriot and now a co-patron of this local community of Vasilitsi. But before we refer to the personality of the Saint, let us first see what the word Saint means.

A Saint means one who is pure — pure from every stain of sin.

Saints have come from every social class: men, women, and children. Saints were not only hierarchs, hieromonks, and clergy; every person has the possibility of participation in holiness.

After all, this is the purpose of our life: holiness through the Holy Spirit. When someone acquires the Holy Spirit, he becomes a saint and fulfills his destiny on earth. Christ Himself commanded: “Be holy, for I am holy,” which means: strive in your life to become saints, just as I am holy, I who created you.

The Nativity of Christ: Homily 6: On the Words of the Kontakion of the Feast of the Nativity of Christ (Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko)


1. The Feasts of the Lord

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko 

I. The Nativity of Christ

Homily No. 6: On the Words of the Kontakion of the Feast of the Nativity of Christ

Today the Virgin gives birth to Him who is above all being,
and the earth offers a cave to Him whom no one can approach.
Angels with shepherds give glory,
and magi journey with a star,
for to us there has been born
a little Child, God before the ages.


I

Here is one of the church hymns for the Feast of the Nativity of Christ, composed by the divinely enlightened Reader of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, Saint Romanos. It briefly yet clearly presents the story of Christ's Nativity — stating who is born today and from whom, where He is born and for what purpose, and how the newborn was greeted by heaven and earth, by angels and humans.

The Cave That Sheltered the Divine Infant in Ancient Babylon of Egypt


By John Fourtounas

When King Herod learned from the Magi that Christ had been born, he asked them, once they found Him, to inform him so that he might supposedly go and worship Him. In reality, however, he wished to destroy Him.

For this reason, an angel warned Joseph to take the Child and His Mother and depart for Egypt, so that the Scripture might be fulfilled which says, “Out of Egypt I have called My Son” (Matthew 2:15).

Indeed, when Herod saw that he had been mocked by the Magi, he ordered that all the male children two years old and under be put to death in the city of Bethlehem and in all the surrounding regions (Gospel of Matthew 2:13–18).

Meanwhile, the betrothed Joseph, together with the Divine Child and His Mother, was already journeying toward the land of Egypt by way of Gaza. He passed through the region of Mount Pelusium, east of today’s city of Port Said, and entered the land of the Nile.

Saint Anysia of Thessaloniki Resource Page

 

Saint Anysia of Thessaloniki in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

Saint Anysia lived during the reign of Maximian. She was from Thessaloniki, and her parents, who were devout and faithful to Christ, possessed considerable wealth. When they departed this life, the Saint lived alone, pleasing God through her way of life and her deeds. Once, as she was going to church according to her custom, she was stopped by a pagan soldier, who forcibly dragged her toward the altars of the idols and urged her to offer sacrifices to demons. But because Anysia confessed her faith in Christ, the soldier became enraged (for the Holy Martyr blew upon him and spat in his face), and with his sword he pierced her side. Thus the Venerable Martyr received her blessed end.


The city of Thessaloniki boasts not only of its patron saint, the Great Martyr and Myrrhgusher Saint Demetrios, not only of its second patron, the great Father and Ecumenical Teacher Saint Gregory Palamas, but also of the Holy Martyr Anysia, whose venerable relic rests in the Church of Saint Demetrios. According to Saint Theophanes the Hymnographer, Thessaloniki boasts of the Saint’s swaddling clothes and her struggles, while the triumphant Church possesses her spirit and rejoices in it — meaning that Saint Anysia is a source of joy for the entire Church, both on earth and in heaven.

December: Day 30: Teaching 2: Holy Martyr Anysia

 
December: Day 30: Teaching 2:
Holy Martyr Anysia

 
(On the Spiritual Joy of a Christian During His Life and at Death)

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko

I. On the feast day of the Holy Martyr Anysia, who voluntarily, out of love for God and her neighbors, renounced wealth and all earthly pleasures, dedicating herself to serving all the poor and unfortunate, and yet was truly happy in the Christian sense of the word due to the spiritual joy she experienced in her heart, it is fitting to speak with you, beloved brethren, about the spiritual joy of a Christian during his life and at death. Without a doubt, a Christian has an inexhaustible source of spiritual joy, which has nothing in common with earthly, worldly joy, which for the vast majority of people is inextricably linked with wealth, honors, and various worldly pleasures, often vain and even impure. A Christian's spiritual joy comes from the grace of the Holy Spirit, communicated through fervent prayer, the Mysteries of the Church, and a pious life in the spirit of Christian faith, hope, and love for God and neighbor. No sorrows or calamities, persecutions, sufferings, or even death itself can take away that gracious consolation of Christ, of which the Apostle Paul speaks: "As the sufferings of Christ abound, so our consolation also abounds through Christ" (2 Cor. 1:5). Not only is the natural man, who does not accept what is of the Spirit of God, incapable of understanding the greatness of spiritual joy, but even spiritual people, who have experienced its effects themselves, have difficulty finding the words to explain it to the ignorant.

Prologue in Sermons: December 30


To Wives Without Children

December 30
 
(From the Life of our Venerable Mother Theodora of Caesarea)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

Wives who have husbands but no children are the most sorrowful of wives. Some have everything: a good husband, health, wealth, and public respect, but no children. Such wives weep, and a hopeless anguish gnaws at them, and they feel ashamed before others, and sometimes they are close to despair. How can we console them? This is how. 

We ask them: "Have you prayed to God to grant you children?"

They say: "We have prayed." 

"But to the Most Holy Theotokos? No? Well, then pray to Her, and your prayer, one can hope, will not be in vain."

December 29, 2025

Why Did God Become Man? (Fr. George Metallinos)


Why Did God Become Man? 

By Protopresbyter Fr. George Metallinos

Wearied by the many celebrations that have degenerated into the mere formal fulfillment of social conventions, modern man approaches Christmas as well without any inner engagement. Most people — even those who are otherwise religious — see Christmas as a large family celebration that offers an opportunity for the scattered family to gather again around the Christ of the manger and the Christmas tree, which has also been taken out of storage to decorate a corner of our home for a few days. Yet today each of us is called to pose the question to himself: What does Christmas mean to me? This is the personalization of the broader question: “Why did God become man?” — a question that has occupied the greatest minds in history.

The Nativity of Christ: Homily 5: On the Ecclesiastical Hymn "Christ is Born, Glorify Him" (Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko)

 
1. The Feasts of the Lord

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko 

I. The Nativity of Christ

Homily No. 5: On the Ecclesiastical Hymn "Christ is Born, Glorify Him; Christ from Heaven, Meet Him; Christ on Earth, Be Exalted"

I. Today — on the day of the festive commemoration of the Nativity of Christ the Savior — let us converse, brethren, about that ecclesiastical hymn with which the Holy Church began to resound in our ears several weeks before the feast itself, as if preparing us for it — the hymn with which the sacred ministers of the Church will come to you and into your homes, like angelic heralds, proclaiming the great day of the Savior’s birth and at the same time teaching how this most illustrious day ought to be observed. Let us therefore delve into every wise word of this wondrous ecclesiastical hymn — lofty in spirit, deep in feeling, and edifying in meaning.

Massacre of the Holy Infants in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

The principal problem posed by the present day — the commemoration of the infants slaughtered by Herod — is the blatant injustice that was committed then, a fact that leads to the ever-relevant and never fully acceptable to human reason problem of theodicy: why did infants and young children, before they even began their lives, lose them — and in such a tragic manner? And where is the justice of God? How did the just God tolerate such an injustice? Does it not then appear that God is absent, or at least hidden, while the devil, with his instruments such as Herod, appears to be sovereign? And on the basis of reflection on the injustice that occurred then, human thought extends across the entire course of human history, recording similar — and perhaps even harsher — events: the enslavement of entire peoples, famines, wars, the degradation of human beings, destitution, unemployment, poverty. In all these cases, the dominant question is: why? And how does God tolerate such conditions?

Prologue in Sermons: December 29


To Restless People Who Love Quarrels

December 29
 
(The Discourse of Saint Antiochus on Contentiousness)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

Unfortunately, there are people who cannot get along with anyone and everywhere bring quarrels and hostility with them. Whatever you speak to them about, they will never agree with anything; for them, everyone is bad, black is always white, and white, on the contrary, seems black to them. These are the most unbearable people. Giving no peace to others, they themselves live as if in hell; and to them one may rightly apply the words of Scripture: “Their tongue is a fire, a world of iniquity; it defiles the whole body and sets on fire the course of life, and is itself set on fire by Gehenna… It is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison” (James 3:6, 8). What can be said to such people, and how can they be corrected?

Homily Three on the Sunday After the Nativity of Christ (St. John of Kronstadt)



Homily Three on the Sunday After the Nativity of Christ

By St. John of Kronstadt

"For the Son of Man has come to seek and to save 
that which was lost" (Luke 19:10)

Finally, we have reached the feast of the Nativity of Christ and we have bowed down to the eternal Child with the Most Pure Ever-Virgin, His Mother, and we have sung with the Church of God's extreme compassion and condescension towards us, for the Son of God became the Son of man in order to save perishing man.

But we have not yet accomplished a great deed merely by bowing before the divine Infant, for many of us have worshiped only with our bodies, and worship with the body without worship of the spirit is a sacrifice far from pleasing to God; it is the Church, not us, that has truly sung of His ineffable goodness and condescension toward humanity: we have been only listeners. I want to ask you and myself: are we doing anything in response to such unspeakable condescension of the Son of God toward us? For such an extreme and astonishing self-emptying of the Son of God for the salvation of perishing humanity demands, my brothers, urgent and intensified efforts from us in the work of salvation. 
 

December 28, 2025

Sunday After Christmas: Faith and Love (Elder Joseph of Vatopaidi)


Sunday After Christmas: 
Faith and Love 


By Elder Joseph of Vatopaidi

Today we celebrate Saint Joseph the Betrothed, David the King, and James the Brother of God, who indeed were related to Christ, since Christ, as man, descends from them, and they belong to the choir of the forefathers. In particular, Saint Joseph the Betrothed — who was also the guardian of the Virgin and contributed so greatly to the mystery of the divine economy. These Saints “were justified by faith.”

In the days of our Lord’s presence, these faithful people were tested far more strictly than the people of the Old Testament; for while they were expecting the Messiah, they were expecting something different from what they actually saw. They did not expect to see a simple infant held by a young mother — poor, despised, without any support or human assistance. They never expected to see such paradoxical things. For, expecting the Messiah “from the root of Jesse and from the loins of David,” they anticipated a king with authority and aspirations of dominion, with material and worldly splendor. That is why, when they began to understand somewhat that Christ was the Messiah, they ran to make Him king — and He withdrew from them.

Homily on the Immaculate and Divine Nativity of Our Great God and Savior Jesus Christ (St. Neophytos the Recluse)


Homily on the Immaculate and Divine Nativity of Our Great God and Savior Jesus Christ 

(For the Sunday After Christmas)

By St. Neophytos the Recluse

We all know, of course, we know that this visible sun sends forth its light to the whole inhabited world, “and there is no one who can hide from its warmth,” nor from its most radiant brilliance. Yet many times its shining rays are covered by clouds and mist, or by the foliage of trees; and yet again, the breath of a wind disperses that cloudy covering and the mist, allowing the luminous rays to spread clearly throughout all creation.

But the Sun before the sun, the intelligible “Sun of Righteousness,” who was born today from the “swift cloud,” from the light-bearing, sunlike, and all-pure womb in a wondrous manner, is covered by the “form of a servant,” by infant swaddling clothes, and by the poor cave — and, according to the divine economy, by certain other things as well, which symbolize poverty and humility.

Homily for the Commemoration of the Holy Prophet and King David (Fr. Daniel Sysoev)


Homily for the Commemoration of the Holy Prophet and King David 

By Fr. Daniel Sysoev

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit!

Congratulations on the feast day of Christ's ancestor in the flesh, King David! King David is an amazing biblical figure who had an incredible thirst for God.

Remember how he says in the Psalms: “As the deer pants for the water brooks, so my soul pants for You, O God! My soul thirsts for God, the living God: when shall I come and appear before God!” (Ps. 41:2-3).

This thirst always filled him. In his life, preserved for us in the First and Second Books of Samuel, we see a remarkable episode. King David had already been anointed king, but had not yet ascended the throne, continuing to serve the illegitimate King Saul, under whom he suffered persecution. His hometown of Bethlehem had been captured by the Philistines. And one day, King David turned to his servants: "Who will bring me water from the well that is before the gate of Bethlehem?" Three of his brave friends agreed, fought through the enemy troops, and brought him water from the well. And when they gave him the water, he said he could not drink it, for it was the blood of his friends, who were ready to lay down their lives for him. And so he offered it as a sacrifice to God.

Sunday After the Nativity of Christ: David and Joseph (Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Mani)


Sunday After the Nativity of Christ:
David and Joseph 


By Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Mani

This feast of the two persons, David and Joseph, on the Sunday after the divine Nativity of our Savior Christ, is in a way somewhat distinctive. Indeed, if no Sunday falls between the 26th and the 31st of December, then the aforementioned feast is celebrated on the 26th of the month.

Thus the Church sets before us two very different figures: a monarch and a craftsman — David the King and Joseph the carpenter. The one lived a thousand years before Christ, and the other lived at the time of Christ.

Holy 20,000 Martyrs of Nicomedia in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

When Emperor Maximian returned victorious from the war against the Ethiopians, he wished to offer sacrifices to the idols as a celebration of his victory. Letters were therefore sent everywhere urging everyone to come to Nicomedia in order to worship his gods. At that time Saint Anthimos, who was Bishop of Nicomedia, gathered the people of Christ in the church (for it was the feast of the Nativity of Christ), and he celebrated together with them and taught them the true faith. As soon as Maximian learned of this, he ordered that brushwood be piled around the church and set on fire, so that the Christians inside would be burned alive.

When the Bishop learned of this, he hastened to baptize the catechumens; then he celebrated the Divine Liturgy and communed all the Christians with the divine and immaculate Mysteries. Thus, from the burning brushwood, all were consumed and brought to their end. Saint Anthimos, however, was preserved by the grace of God, so that after benefiting others as well and leading them to Christ through Holy Baptism, he might, after many sufferings, depart to Him and enjoy the Kingdom of Heaven.


Prologue in Sermons: December 28


To the Monks About Obedience

December 28
 
(A Saying from the Paterikon of John the Kolovos)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

One day, Venerable John the Kolovos came to his mentor, nicknamed the Thebean because of his place of residence. The Thebean, seeing John, took a dry tree, planted it in the ground, and said to his disciple, "Here is your obedience: water this tree every day until it bears fruit." John fulfilled his teacher's will and watered the tree the elder had planted for two years. In the third year, it came to life and bore fruit. Then the elder picked this fruit, brought it to the church, and said to the brethren, "Come and partake of this fruit of obedience." 

Having recounted this incident from the lives of the Venerable Fathers Paul of Thebes and John the Kolovos, I ask you, brethren, tell me: why did Venerable Paul pick the fruit from the tree he had once planted, bring it to the church, and show it to the brethren? What was the purpose of this act?

My Holy Christmas in Aivali (Photios Kontoglou)

“The Nativity,” Oil on canvas, 1936. 
“Mural of the Peribleptos Monastery in Mystras. Copied by hand by Photios Kontoglou, after being freed from soot and salts, in the year of salvation 1936, in the month of August.”

By Photios Kontoglou

When I was very young, I spent the holidays with my family on a storm-beaten mountain, at Agia Paraskevi.

Most of the hours I would go and sit inside the small, fragrant little church — not only during the services, but also at times when no one else was inside except me. I would read the ancient hymns and would find myself in a state that I cannot convey to another. Above all, the iambic canon “He saved the people” (Έσωσε λαόν) made me feel as though I were in the first days of creation, just as primeval as the nature that surrounded me: the gigantic rock hanging over the little church, the sea, the wild trees and grasses, the clean stones, the small deserted islets visible out on the open water, the icy north wind that blew and made everything appear crystal clear, the lambs bleating, the shepherds clothed in sheepskins, the stars shining at night like frozen dewdrops.

December 27, 2025

2011 Pastoral Encyclical for Christmas (Metr. Hierotheos of Nafpaktos)

 
Pastoral Encyclical

Sacred Metropolis of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

Christmas 2011

A Message of Optimism, Hope, and Freedom


This year again we celebrate the Birth of Christ within the wonderful atmosphere of our illuminated holy churches, within the radiant setting created by the astonishing and heavenly troparia that we chanted at the service of Matins and by the exquisite Apolytikion of Christmas, as well as within the compunctionate and radiant Divine Liturgy of the feast of Christmas. Everything appears beautiful and spreads a calm within our souls; everything is festive, and we sense peace from the presence of the Grace of the Triune God within the church.

Homily for Christmas (Fr. Daniel Sysoev)


Homily for Christmas 

By Fr. Daniel Sysoev

In the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit!

Today we celebrate a wondrous day, as the prophets of old foretold. A small child has been born — the eternal Son, the Angel of the Great Counsel of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, the Mighty God, the Ruler, the Prince of the world, who was given for reconciliation between God and man, and the Father of the future Universe, with whom begins the great healing of all mankind. This is a flame overflowing with beauty and power, seething with life and strength, filled with love, mercy, and justice. This is but a faint shadow of the eternal existence of God the Son, who, like the eternal sun, is born from the essence of the sun's infinity. The sun begets the sun, God the Father in eternity begets the Son, the flame bursts forth from the flame and yet remains within this infinite flame. No one can withstand this secret flame, that Trinity of Light, the image of which we bear in our arms. We were all initiated into this Triune Light during baptism, but none can withstand even the approach of this infinite Light. The greatest fiery, flaming spirits — the seraphim — tremble at this Light, and when they approach God, they cover their faces with their wings in terror, lest they burst into flame and be consumed by the endless flame of Almighty God. They cry out in terror and sing with thunderous voices: "Holy, holy, holy, Lord of hosts, heaven and earth are full of Your glory."

The Nativity of Christ: Homily 4: On the Commemoration of the Deliverance of Russia From the Invasion of the Gauls (Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko)


1. The Feasts of the Lord

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko 

I. The Nativity of Christ

Homily No. 4: On the Commemoration of the Deliverance of the Church and the Russian State from the Invasion of the Gauls and the Twelve Allied Nations

I. No nation, except for the people of God, has been granted from above so mighty a help in the struggle against the darkness of enemies as was freely shown by the gracious Providence in the severe hour of the invasions of the Gauls (French) to our Orthodox homeland. Not only we ourselves saw it, but, in the words of the Church, “all the nations saw in us that the Most High is God, and there is none besides Him. He kills and makes alive; He smites and He heals, and none can deliver from His hand.” Therefore, exclaims the Holy Church, “Our heart is established in the Lord our God; our horn is exalted in our God,” and all the more triumphantly, after this, she proclaims the joyful song of victory: “God is with us; understand, O nations, and submit yourselves, for God is with us! Hear, even to the ends of the earth, that God is with us!”

Holy Protomartyr and Archdeacon Stephen in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church

 
By Fr. George Dorbarakis

The Saint’s Hymnographer, John the Monk, refers to the whole sanctified course of Stephen’s life: to the fact that from the very moment he became a Christian he was “a man full of the Spirit and of power,” and to the fact that he was chosen by the people and ordained by the Apostles as their helper — both in the service of tables and in preaching; and also to the events of his arrest, his defense, his theoptic experience, and his grace-filled martyrdom.

What the Hymnographer especially highlights is the manner in which he departed this life: by stoning — a customary method among the Jews for those considered to have blasphemed their faith. And as an exquisite poet he does not remain only with what the senses observe — the throwing of stones — but also reveals the non-sensory dimension:

December: Day 27: Teaching 2: Holy Martyr Maurice and the 70 Soldiers Who Suffered With Him

 
 
December: Day 27: Teaching 2:*
Holy Martyr Maurice and the 70 Soldiers Who Suffered With Him

 
(On the Need for Patience)

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko

I. The ingenuity of the torturers of the Holy Martyrs Maurice and those with him, whose memories are celebrated today, was exhausted, and all forms of torture were tried in vain to turn the Martyrs away from Christ. But one of the emperor's advisers suggested the following: "There is a swamp nearby, infested with all kinds of insects. The Martyrs could be taken there, their bodies anointed with honey, and tied to trees." Emperor Maximian was greatly pleased with this satanic advice and ordered it to be carried out. The Holy Martyrs endured terrible torments from insects, heat, and thirst for ten days, and all peacefully surrendered their spirits to God.

II. The Holy Martyr Maurice and the Seventy Soldiers who suffered with him for Christ amaze us with their wondrous patience: ten days of terrible torment, ending in slow death, and not a single word of complaint, not a single sign of impatience. Let our word now be about the necessity of Christian patience, without which salvation is impossible.

Prologue in Sermons: December 27

 
Why We Should Love our Enemies and Pray For Them

December 27
 
(Commemoration of the Holy Apostle and Protomartyr Archdeacon Stephen)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

We must love our enemies and pray for them.

Why is this so? First of all, because the Lord gave us a commandment to love them. He says, "Love your enemies, bless those who curse you, do good to those who hate you, pray for those who revile you and persecute you" (Matthew 5:44).

Secondly, we must love our enemies according to the commandment of the Holy Apostle Paul, who teaches: "Bless those who persecute you; bless and curse not, and render to no one evil for evil, thinking what is good in the sight of all men. If it be possible, as much as depends on you, live peaceably with all men... If therefore your enemy hungers, give him food; if he thirsts, give him drink... Do not be overcome of evil, but overcome evil with good" (Rom. 12:14–21).

December 26, 2025

Route and Stations of the "Holy Family" During Their Flight into Egypt

 
 
By Ioannis Fourtounas

When King Herod learned from the Magi that Christ had been born, he asked them, once they had found Him, to inform him so that he might supposedly go and worship Him.

In reality, however, he wished to destroy Him.

For this reason an angel warned Joseph to take the Child and His Mother and depart for Egypt, so that the Scripture might be fulfilled which says, “Out of Egypt I called My Son” (Matt. 2:15).

The choice of Egypt was made because it lay outside Herod’s jurisdiction, because it was accessible through established trade routes, and also because of the large Jewish community living there.

After various stops along the way, according to local tradition, they found hospitality in the ancient city of Babylon, where even today there exists the cave of their dwelling in the land of the Nile.

According to early Christian traditions, the Divine Child, His Mother, Joseph, and James the brother of the Lord traveled to twenty-six locations in Egypt and remained in the land of the Nile for three years, six months, and ten days.

The Synaxis of the Most Holy Theotokos in the Hymnography of the Orthodox Church


By Fr. George Dorbarakis

The Synaxis of the Most Holy Theotokos, first of all, should be recalled as belonging to the tradition of the Church: after the great event of God’s coming into the world for the salvation of humanity, the person who played the central role in that event is celebrated. Thus, after the Nativity of the Lord we have the Synaxis of the Theotokos — she who became the “bridge by which God descended” — just as after His Baptism we have the Synaxis of Saint John the Baptist. It is, of course, unnecessary to say that the event itself, the feast proper, is in direct relationship with the central person; in other words, each Synaxis constitutes an extension of the feast, emphasizing and repeating its very meaning, and to a great extent even its hymns.

Chapel of Panagia Theoskepasti in Santorini


Perched high, very high, on the Western edge of the Skaros rock in Imerovigli of Santorini, Panagia Theoskepasti (She Who Is Covered by God) blesses the Aegean!

This is a beautiful chapel on one of the most difficult heights of Santorini, standing alone, amidst winds and storms and dominating with her Grace the vast blue that lies before it. Its unique beauty inspired the great Greek writer Elias Venezis to write a beautiful short story dedicated to this chapel!

From its small courtyard, which is located at a height of 400 meters in a vertical position above the sea, the pilgrim can enjoy the sun, while it sinks into the Aegean, setting the sky on fire with red colors.

The truth is that it is not an easy task to get there. There are many steps. Over 300. And the path is difficult and in some parts windy and dangerous.

Venerable Hieromartyr Gerasimus of Tismana (+ 1951)



After being born on January 21, 1912, at Holy Baptism, the Saint received the name Gregory Iscu, after his father. His mother was named Elena and ended her life as a nun. He inherited from his righteous parents the love of God and the love of prayer.

At the age of 12, he was accepted into the Holy Monastery of Bogdana, not far from his birthplace. He attended the Monastic Seminary at Neamț Monastery, then at Cernica Monastery. During this period, he entered as a brother into the Holy Monastery of Tismana, where he was tonsured into monasticism and given the name Gerasimus.

The Venerable Father showed great diligence in church services, obedience, and his cell rule, gaining the gift of tears and unceasing prayer. Being a fellow sufferer in his heart with all people, he was soon deemed worthy of the priestly rank, which he loved and honoured throughout his life, for he said: “I desired and still desire to be only a servant of the Altar, a service which, with God’s help, I have never defiled.”

Synaxis of the Icon of the Mother of God of the Three Joys

Icon of the Mother of God "The Three Joys" (Feast Day - December 26)
 
It is customary to contrast the West and the East — and not without reason: specialists point out significant differences in the artistic aspirations of thinkers, writers, and musicians, giving rise to two completely dissimilar, even in some respects opposite, types of culture. Yet history does not always fit within the framework of commonly accepted opinion. True spirituality not only works miracles, but also unites different worlds.

These thoughts arise when one reads about the destiny of the Icon of the Mother of God “The Three Joys.” How strange and unusual it is: an image of Western origin, traditionally attributed to the brush of Raphael, became a Russian wonderworking icon. Is this possible? Yes. With God all things are possible.

At the beginning of the eighteenth century, a certain pious painter brought from Italy a copy of an icon depicting the Holy Family. He left this image in Moscow with his relative, a priest of the Church of the Holy Trinity in Gryazi. Later, the priest donated the icon that had been brought to him to his own parish church of the Holy Trinity. There the icon was placed on the church porch, above the entrance to the church.

The Nativity of Christ: Homily 3: On the Meaning of the Feast of the Nativity of Christ (Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko)

 

1. The Feasts of the Lord

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko 

I. The Nativity of Christ

Homily No. 3: On the Meaning of the Feast of the Nativity of Christ

“Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people: for unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a Savior, who is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:10–11).

I. Thus proclaimed the Angel of the Lord to the shepherds of Bethlehem on that blessed night when Jesus Christ was born in Bethlehem. “I bring you good tidings of great joy,” said the heavenly messenger, “which shall be to all people: for unto you is born this day, in the city of David, a Savior, who is Christ the Lord.”

II. Great is the joy proclaimed by the Angel of the Lord; great is the joy to which the Church of Christ now calls all her children.

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