March 25, 2026

The “Excommunication” of Alexander Ypsilantis


By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

About ten years ago (around 1988), an excellent book was published under this title. It was written, based on archival material, by the capable author and historical researcher Mr. Petros Georgantzis. The book deals with a subtle aspect of the Greek Revolution of 1821, namely the so-called “excommunication” issued by the Ecumenical Patriarchate against Alexander Ypsilantis.

Much has been said about this issue, most of it shaped by particular ideological perspectives, without a proper study of the historical and canonical data that led to this “excommunication.” The book is divided into two parts. The first is titled: “Historical Investigation of the ‘Excommunication’ of March 1821,” and the second: “Ecclesiastical–Canonical Investigation of the ‘Excommunication.’”

Both parts contain various chapters that provide extensive information and valuable material for understanding this event. It should be noted that the author consistently places the word “excommunication” in quotation marks, because he clearly does not accept that this text is truly an act of excommunication.

Homily for the Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos (Fr. Daniel Sysoev)

  
Homily for the Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos 

By Fr. Daniel Sysoev

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

Today is the joy of the Annunciation. Today heaven and earth are united. Today the ancient curse disappears, Adam’s transgression is erased, and sorrow is turned into joy. Today is the day when God became man so that man might become god. Today the heavens have broken through the barrier set by human sin, through the humble consent of the Virgin and her creative word: “Let it be to me according to your word” (Luke 1:38).

God became man so that man might ascend to heavenly heights. God took on weak, sinful, mortal human nature in order to grant it sinlessness, incorruption, and purity. God receives flesh from the most pure Virgin in order to teach us divine purity. And today is the day of the Gospel, the day of the Good News, when we hear of the hope for which we live. This is the hope of deification, because we are called to become gods by grace.

Homily Two for the Day of the Annunciation (Archpriest Rodion Putyatin)

 
Homily Two for the Day of the Annunciation 

By Archpriest Rodion Putyatin

(Delivered on Holy and Great Saturday)

I do not know what to say to you today, devout listeners.

Should I say, “Weep”? But you will say, “How can we weep when today joy has been proclaimed to the whole world?”

Should I say, “Rejoice”? But others will say, “How can we rejoice when Jesus Christ, our joy, lies today in the tomb?”

In this uncertainty, the following thought came to me: can you force a person to rejoice if he is not inclined to joy? Of course, it is difficult. And can you force a person to weep if he is not inclined to tears? That too is difficult. So let each person today remain in whatever disposition he is in — but that disposition must be given the proper direction.

Are you inclined today to rejoice? Then rejoice.

Are you inclined today to weep? Then weep.

Both sorrow and joy are fitting for this day.

Homily at the Paraklesis of the Theotokos: On Imitating the Virtues of the Mother of God (Archimandrite Kirill Pavlov)


Homily at the Paraklesis of the Theotokos:
On Imitating the Virtues of the Mother of God 


By Archimandrite Kirill Pavlov

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

“Rejoice, full of grace! The Lord is with you; blessed are you among women!” (Luke 1:28). With these words the heavenly messenger greeted the Most Holy Virgin, bringing her the good news that she would give birth to the Savior of the world. In response to this angelic greeting, we hear prophetic words that she, the Most Holy Virgin Mary, spoke to her relative, the righteous Elizabeth. These words were not spoken out of passing emotion, but under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit:

“For behold, from now on all generations will call me blessed” (Luke 1:48). These prophetic words have been fulfilled for two thousand years, as people throughout the world glorify the Most Pure One as the Mother of God, exalt her as more honorable than the Cherubim and beyond compare more glorious than the Seraphim, and bless her as the protectress of the Christian people.

Homily Three on the Annunciation (St. John of Kronstadt)


Homily Three on the Annunciation 

By St. John of Kronstadt

“Today is the beginning of our salvation 
and the revelation of the mystery from all eternity:
the Son of God becomes the Son of the Virgin.”
(Troparion of the Feast)


Beloved brothers and sisters!

This present day is the beginning of our salvation from sin, which entered the human race through our forefather Adam; today the greatest mystery of God has been revealed, foreordained by God before all ages: the Son of God, without beginning, all-powerful, the Source of wisdom and understanding, the Source of goodness, the Creator of heaven and earth, the Creator of Adam, becomes the Son of the Most Pure Virgin, and the Virgin becomes the Mother of God; God becomes man without ceasing to be God, in order to restore man from the fall, from sin, to deliver him from death and eternal torment, and to make the sinner holy.

O wondrous mystery, surpassing all understanding! O ineffable goodness of God! To fallen man, deserving of every punishment, such immeasurable mercy has been given! Yes, mercy truly divine and boundless — but mercy, however, for sinners who truly repent; for the unrepentant, there will be the greater condemnation, because, trampling upon such great gifts of God by their lawless life, they have not desired to repent sincerely.

March: Day 25: Teaching 3: Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos


March: Day 25: Teaching 3:
Annunciation of the Most Holy Theotokos

 
(What Does the Annunciation Mean, and What Does It Teach Us?)

By Archpriest Grigory Dyachenko

I. Why is the present day called the day of the Annunciation? — Obviously, because of some good tidings for all of us. What is this tidings?

a) It is the tidings that to us poor ones on earth there has now descended the Only-begotten Son of God, the eternal Word, by Whom all things visible and invisible were created and are sustained in being. He descended to such an extent that He clothed Himself in our nature, became in all things like us except for sin, a man, and this not for some temporary period, whether small or great, but for all eternity.

b) It is the tidings that this incarnate Son of God will accomplish for our salvation everything that is necessary: He will enlighten us with the light of truth and show us the way to eternal life; He will take upon Himself our sins and blot them out by His sufferings; He will descend into the grave and by His Resurrection dispel for us the darkness of the tomb and the fear of death; He will grant us the Holy Spirit and with Him the fullness of the gifts of grace, so that, being cleansed from every impurity, we may become capable of dwelling in heaven with the angels.

Prologue in Sermons: March 25


One Must Not Approach the Holy Mysteries Without Preparation

March 25

(A Word of John of Damascus on the Communion of the Body of Christ)

By Archpriest Victor Guryev

One must not approach the Communion of the Holy Mysteries without preparation, as the Holy Apostle Paul also says: “Let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread and drink of that cup. For he who eats and drinks unworthily eats and drinks judgment to himself, not discerning the Body of the Lord” (1 Cor. 11:28–29).

In what, then, should preparation for receiving the Holy Mysteries consist?

Saint John of Damascus reasons about this as follows:

“Many receive the Body of Christ simply out of custom, and not as they ought according to the law, with a pure thought and mind, during the holy Fast and in the Paschal season. First of all, one must pass through the holy Fast in purity and cleanse one’s conscience, and only then partake; otherwise, one who is unclean will be unworthy to taste of the Table of Christ. Remember that even in the Old Testament people approached the sacrifices with fear and purified themselves beforehand. But we receive the Body and Blood of Christ with defiled hands and without fear, whereas even the angels tremble before them.

And you, Christian, know the time of Communion, yet you do not prepare yourself for Communion itself. Consider: can you approach even an earthly king with foul-smelling lips? How then shall we approach the Heavenly King with them? Do you not hear what is proclaimed in the Church? ‘Let those in the state of catechumens depart, and let those who are not in repentance not receive!’

Therefore, let only the worthy approach Holy Communion, and let the unworthy not partake, because they will receive the Holy Mysteries unto judgment for themselves, unto condemnation and torment. For this reason the priest proclaims: ‘The holy things are for the holy!’ that is, let only the holy approach. It is not said simply ‘pure,’ but ‘holy.’ ‘He who eats this Bread and drinks this Cup unworthily is guilty of the Body and Blood of the Lord.’”

March 24, 2026

Illness, Cure and the Therapist according to Saint John of the Ladder

 
By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

Today, there is a lot of talk about the cure of man, since we have realized that, by living an individualistic way of life, separated from community and reality, obliged to live in a tradition that has lost its communal character, where there is no communion and preservation of the person, man is sick. Naturally, when we talk of illness we do not mean its neurological and psychological aspect, but we mean illness as the loss of the true meaning of life. It is an illness that is first and foremost ontological (i.e. to do with our very being).

The Orthodox Church seeks to heal the sick personality of man and indeed this is the work of Orthodox theology. In the Patristic texts we see the truth that Orthodox theology is a therapeutic science and method: on the one hand, because theologians are those who have acquired personal knowledge of God, within the context of revelation, and thus all the powers of their soul have been already cured by the Grace of God; on the other hand because these theologians, who have found the meaning of life, the true meaning of their existence, go on to help others in their journey along this way, the way of theosis.

In attempting to study human problems we come to the realization that at their very depth these problems are theological, since man was created according to the Image and Likeness of God. This means that man was created by God to have and to maintain a relationship with God, a relationship with other people, and a relationship with the whole of creation. This relationship was successful for first-formed human beings, Adam and Eve, precisely because they possessed God's Grace. When, however, man's inner world became sick, when human beings lost their orientation towards God and consequently God's Grace, then this living and life-giving relationship ceased to exist. The result of this was that all his relationships with God, with his fellow man, with creation and with his own self were upset. All his internal and external strength was disorganized. He ceased to have God as his focus, and instead he replaced him with his own self. A self, however that was cut off from those other parameters became autonomous, resulting in him becoming sick in both essence and reality. Therefore, in all that follows health is understood as a real and true relationship, and illness, as the interruption of that relationship, when man falls away from his essential dialogue with God, his fellow men and creation, and sinks into a tragic monologue.

"The Ladder" of Saint John of Sinai as Spiritual Tablets Engraved by God


By Panagiotis Andriopoulos

Today is the Fourth Sunday of the Fast, and the Church honors Saint John of Sinai, the author of The Ladder.

I leaf through the Ladder of Saint John and try to understand — on an intellectual level, of course — the very deep concepts (as I suspect) contained in its respective chapters: On Detachment, On Exile (Living as a Stranger), On Joyful Mourning, On Insensibility, On Well-Discerned Discernment, On the Different Types of Hesychia and their Distinction (!) and so on. The words I encounter are also very distinctive and, I would say, powerful — Greek words which, of course, are no longer part of our everyday vocabulary: θεήλατος (divinely-driven), καλλίπενθος (beautifully mournful), ταπεινόνους (humble-minded), φερέπονος (pain-bearer), αμετεώριστος (unwavering), σύννοια (unity of mind), απαράκλητος (inconsolable), and others.