By Fr. George Dorbarakis
“Jacob mourned the loss of Joseph, while the noble one sat in a chariot, honored as a king; for, having not been enslaved to the pleasures of the Egyptian woman, he was glorified by Him who sees the hearts of men and bestows an incorruptible crown” (Kontakion of Orthros, Great Monday).
The kontakion refers to one of the two themes that our Church commemorates on Great Monday: the person of the all-comely Joseph, son of the Patriarch Jacob, who prefigures — prophesies without words — the Lord Jesus Christ; his freedom from resentment and his humility point to the very author of our faith. The other commemorated event is the fig tree that the Lord cursed because of its barrenness — a symbol of the barrenness of the Jewish Synagogue of His time and, by extension, the barrenness of every person who is considered a believer in God throughout the ages, whose lack of fruits in life, that is, virtues, results precisely in his withering, as a cutting off from God.
What we particularly wish to emphasize, then, is the spiritual law that we see set forth by the Holy Hymnographer — a law that is grounded in and continually proclaimed by Jesus Christ Himself. What is this law? That what a person does, whether positively or negatively, brings about a corresponding result. Does one perform what is good? The Lord will look upon him with favor, glorifying him and offering him the “incorruptible crown,” that is, His very grace — the flooding of His presence within one’s being. Does one deny God, in the sense of turning passionately toward evil and sin? He will “receive” the corresponding outcome: the Lord will turn His face away from him, which means He will withdraw His grace, leaving the person exposed to the workings of the Evil One, literally at the mercy of his destructive intentions. For certainly no one remains “uncovered” and “ownerless,” alone with himself. Man is always “serving” somewhere. Thus, either he “serves” the Lord and is thereby exalted as His son, abiding within His blessed and beatifying embrace, being one with Him; or he “serves” his passions and the Evil One who stirs and inflames them, and thus becomes a slave to the most turbulent being in creation, already tasting that being’s hell even in this life.