Glory to Jesus Christ
Sunday, 11/22, 25th Sunday after Pentecost
9:00 a.m. +Iwan Sowa requested by Bohdan Sowa
10:30 a.m. For the people of the parish
Epistle: Ephesians 4:1-6
Gospel: Luke 12:16-21, Tone 8
Monday, 11/23, Holy Fathers Amphilochius and Gregory
9:00 a.m. No particular intention for the Divine Liturgy
Tuesday, 11/24, Holy Martyrs Catherine and Mercurius
9:00 a.m. +Patricia J. Burger (Pan.) requested by Andrew and Katia Bamber
Wednesday, 11/25, Holy Hieromartyr Clement
9:00 a.m. All Souls in Purgatory requested by Nataliia Dankevych
Thursday, 11/26, Our Venerable Father Alypius
9:00 a.m. +Eugenia Harvey (7th Anniv., Pan.) requested by Carl Harvey
Friday, 11/27, Holy Great Martyr James
9:00 a.m. +Vasyl Lupsac (Pan.)
Saturday, 11/28, Holy Venerable Martyr Stephen
9:00 a.m. God’s blessing and health for Richard and Lisa requested by Larissa and Lance Swartwout
Sunday, 11/29, 26th Sunday after Pentecost
9:00 a.m. +Wasyl Jureczko (2nd Anniv.) requested by the Furmanyk family
10:30 a.m. For the people of the parish
Epistle: Ephesians 4:1-6
Gospel: Luke 12:16-21, Tone 8
Tomorrow, November 21, is a holy day. The Divine Liturgy will be served at 9:00 a.m. in both English and Ukrainian.
At the beginning of the Fast before Christmas, we celebrate the feast of St. Matthew, who wrote one of the Gospels of the birth of our Lord. (St. Luke is the other.) St. Matthew’s purpose was to show how the prophecies of the Covenant were fulfilled in Jesus. Therefore, he is the son of Abraham and the Son of David. He fulfills the prophecy of Isaiah that a virgin would give birth, the prophecy of Micah that he would be born in Bethlehem, the prophecy of Jeremiah that the innocents would die, and that he would be called a Nazorean. Matthew tells us of the visit of the Magi, the massacre of the innocents, and the flight into Egypt. It is also Matthew who presents to us the model figure of St. Joseph. Just as the Joseph of the Old Testament saved his people in Egypt, so the Joseph of the New Testament saves the hope of the people, Jesus, by taking him to Egypt. We have no better model of human fatherhood. Joseph is a righteous man (Matthew 1:19), who is open to God’s revelation through his messenger angel that the child of Mary is of God, a faith that goes beyond human knowledge. It is Joseph who protects the child, his foster son, so that Jesus, the Savior, could someday fulfill the plan of the heavenly Father. It is Joseph who re-orders his whole life for the sake of his beloved child. Joseph, then, is a model of divine fatherhood, “from whom every fatherhood in heaven and on earth is named. (Ephesians 3:15)”
Lord Jesus, You have come so many times to us and found no resting place; forgive us for our overcrowded lives, our vain haste, and our preoccupation with self. Come again, O Lord, and though our hearts are a jumble of voices and our minds overlaid with many fears, find a place however humble, where You can begin to work Your wonder as You create peace and joy within us. If in some hidden corner, in some out-of-the-way spot, we can clear away the clutter and shut out the noise and darkness, come be born again in us, and we shall kneel in perfect peace with the wisest and humblest of men.
All Christian churches prepare for the feast of the birth of Christ by some sort of period of penance. The Western church calls this the period of Advent, connected with the Latin word for “come,” since we are waiting for Christ to come into our lives. We may be celebrating an event in the past, the birth of Jesus, the first coming of God into our world, but we are also celebrating the present, God coming into our own lives and into the world of today, and the future expectation of Christ’s second coming, when he will come in glory to judge tote world in righteousness.
