January 6, 2007

  • ~The 12th Day of Christmas~

    THEOPHANY

    Feast of Epiphany-Diving for the Cross

    (this is what we will be doing tomorrow after Church at a local lake.)
     
     
    Experience an ancient and beautiful ceremony, the Feast of Epiphany. This moving service commemorates and celebrates the baptism of Jesus Christ by John the Baptist in the Jordan river. (Gospel of Mark 1:9-11)
      

    In the outdoor service, a cross is thrown into the waters. The diver who retrieves the cross is then formally blessed by the Priest for a year of special blessings.
     
    The ceremony concludes as a dove is released, symbolizing the Holy Spirit, who appeared during the baptism of Jesus.
     
    This service is also conducted in Tarpon Springs, Florida the most famous outdoor service conducted by the Greek Archbishop in the United States. This ancient Christian service  is also known as the blessing of the Waters.

    Christ is Baptized!

    January 6

    Theophany
    Feast of the Theophany of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ

    Theophany is the Feast which reveals the Most Holy Trinity to the world through the Baptism of the Lord (Mt 3:13-17; Mk 1:9-11; Luke 3:21-22). God the Father spoke from Heaven about the Son, the Son was baptized by the St John the Forerunner, and the Holy Spirit descended upon the Son in the form of a dove. From ancient times this Feast was called the Day of Illumination and the Feast of Lights, since God is Light and has appeared to illumine “those who sat in darkness,” and “in the region of the shadow of death” (Mt 4:16), and to save the fallen race of mankind by grace.

    In the ancient Church it was the custom to baptize catechumens at the Vespers of Theophany, so that Baptism also is revealed as the spiritual illumination of mankind.

    The origin of the Feast of Theophany goes back to Apostolic times, and it is mentioned in The Apostolic Constitutions (Book V:13). From the second century we have the testimony of St Clement of Alexandria concerning the celebration of the Baptism of the Lord, and the night vigil before this Feast.

    There is a third century dialogue about the services for Theophany between the holy martyr Hippolytus and St Gregory the Wonderworker. In the following centuries, from the fourth to ninth century, all the great Fathers of the Church: Gregory the Theologian, John Chrysostom, Ambrose of Milan, John of Damascus, commented on the Feast of Theophany.

    The monks Joseph the Studite, Theophanes and Byzantios composed much liturgical music for this Feast, which is sung at Orthodox services even today. St John of Damascus said that the Lord was baptized, not because He Himself had need for cleansing, but “to bury human sin by water,” to fulfill the Law, to reveal the mystery of the Holy Trinity, and finally, to sanctify “the nature of water” and to offer us the form and example of Baptism.

    On the Feast of the Baptism of Christ, the Holy Church proclaims our faith in the most sublime mystery, incomprehensible to human intellect, of one God in three Persons. It teaches us to confess and glorify the Holy Trinity, one in Essence and Indivisible. It exposes and overthrows the errors of ancient teachings which attempted to explain the Creator of the world by reason, and in human terms.

    The Church shows the necessity of Baptism for believers in Christ, and it inspires us with a sense of deep gratitude for the illumination and purification of our sinful nature. The Church teaches that our salvation and cleansing from sin is possible only by the power of the grace of the Holy Spirit, therefore it is necessary to preserve worthily these gifts of the grace of holy Baptism, keeping clean this priceless garb, for “As many as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ” (Gal 3:27).

Comments (5)

  • If you have any answers for me please do so :)

  • ? ?????????? ?????????! (Got that? If not, just remember that it’s Christmas in Russia today. . . . :) )

  • Hehehe! Merry Christmas! Christ is Born! Glorify Him!!! (am I redecorating too soon for you?) LOL! :love:

  • RYC: Really, Pres. Lisa? You recommend it? I thought it might be right up there with the Evil Eye bead jewelry. Should I ask Father?

  • RYC: Well, burying him upside down seems like such an ugly thing to do, anyway. Does that mean that the Orthodox don’t ask him to intercede for our houses to sell, either, or is it just that we don’t bury the statue?

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