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Home - People of God - Incarnation - Kingdom of God - Salvation - Sanctification - Trinity - Creation - Prayer - Consecration - Tradition - Saints - Heaven and Hell - Visitors Centre - Site Map Saints
Introduction
From the Profession
of Faith at Chrismation…
“I
believe and confess that it is proper to reverence and invoke the saints who
reign on high with Christ, according to the interpretation of the Holy
Orthodox-Catholic Church; and that their prayers and intercessions avail with
the beneficent God unto our salvation.
It is well-pleasing in the sight of God that we should do homage to their
relics, glorified through incorruption, as the precious memorials of their
virtues.”
The saints personalise
Christianity. There are versions of
Christianity around which reduce Church life to a set of doctrines, good in
themselves, but because they are not enfleshed in the lives of real people, such
Christianity remains, abstract, dry, formal, conceptual.
Think back to your time at school.
I guess it’s not the lessons you remember directly, rather the teachers
who, for you, embodied and made accessible what they taught.
So it is with saints. If you
want to know who the Holy Spirit is, read the account of Motovilov’s
conversation with Fr. Seraphim. If
you want to understand the place of monasticism in the life of the Church, read
St. Athanasios’ Life of St. Antony the Great.
If you value the healing work of God, don’t even read about it, just
invoke the prayers of St. Panteleimon, St. Swithun or some other unmercenary
healer. The saints make real, vivid
and personal what we believe and how we live by those beliefs. Secondly, the
saints warm the fellowship of the Church.
Being the friends of God, they are our friends as well.
As friends, we should get to know them, develop a personal
relationship with them. We
can do this in ordinary tangible ways.
Their icons are our portals into their fellowship.
Their incorrupt remains are memorials of a faith and a life that
is literally death-destroying by the power of God.
Their prayers, when invoked, avail with God for our salvation.
They are mighty intercessors before the Lord and many are the
miracles that have been wrought by their prayers.
It is right that we should develop personal attachments to those
particular saints who speak to us, those to whom we feel drawn.
In this way is the Church built up within one fellowship, the
Communion of Saints, here and beyond the grave. Thirdly, the
saints provide us with living testimonies of a redeemed humanity.
They show that Christian perfection is not an absurd or inaccessible
goal. They are the ones whom God
has touched and made whole. They
shine with the uncreated light of the Godhead, irradiating their humanity with
the new life of the Kingdom against which even death itself has no power.
They are mirrors, as we behold them, of what we could be.
They inspire us towards this goal, theiosis, the promise of a new
humanity, a New Creation, transcending even the biological necessities and
chances of evolution towards something sublime and true, the Love of God made
visible, the birth pangs of a new age in which God shall be all and in all. Resources Scripture "Therefore we also, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which so easily ensnares us, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith, who for the joy that was set before Him endured the cross, despising the shame, and has sat down at the right hand of the throne of God." Hebrews 12:1-2 Articles "On the Saints and their writings" (Bishop Alexander's web site) Exploration Pascha Cycle - "Icons of God" Pentecost Cycle - "Communion of Saints" Holy Cross Cycle - "Pilgrimages and Relics" Nativity Cycle - "Holiness"
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