Monday, November 17, 2025

Youth and the Church: Who Is To Blame?


By Archimandrite Porphyrios, 
Abbot of the Holy Forerunner in Veria

Just a short while ago, I read another article on a topic that interests many. A respected monk from Mount Athos, who has now passed away, analyzes the subject: Youth and the Church.

Specifically, who or what is to blame for young people not attending Church?

I do not believe that young people do not go to Church. They do, and quite frequently. However, young people have certain expectations, and they express them more intensely than those who have since become set in their ways and indifferent. But that is a discussion for another time.

The text that will follow has been contemplated countless times, and, to tell the truth, each time I was about to write it, I was seized by an indistinct fear. Fear, because what you are about to read is not easily spoken.

A long and severe labor. And behold, now, the outcome. And since we are in Lent, in its second half, on the downward slope, which is also the more difficult part, I ask in advance for the sympathy of our readers.

Friday, June 6, 2025

Children and Ecclesiastical Life (Fr. Alexander Schmemann)

 

By Protopresbyter Alexander Schmemann 

As a general rule, children like attending Church, and this instinctive attraction to and interest in Church services is the foundation on which we must build our religious education. When parents worry that children will get tired because services are long and are sorry for them, they usually subconsciously express their concern not for their children but for themselves. Children penetrate more easily than do adults into the world of ritual, of liturgical symbolism. They feel and appreciate the atmosphere of our Church services. The experience of Holiness, the sense of encounter with Someone Who is beyond daily life, that mysterium tremendum that is at the root of all religion and is the core of our services is more accessible to our children than it is to us. "Except ye become as little children," these words apply to the receptivity, the open-mindedness, the naturalness, which we lose when we grow out of childhood. How many men have devoted their lives to the service of God and consecrated themselves to the Church because from childhood they have kept their love for the house of worship and the joy of liturgical experience! Therefore, the first duty of parents and educators is to "suffer little children and forbid them not" (Matt. 19:14) to attend Church. It is in Church before every place else that children must hear the word of God. In a classroom the word is difficult to understand, it remains abstract, but in Church it is in its own element. In childhood we have the capacity to understand, not intellectually, but with our whole being, that there is no greater joy on earth than to be in Church, to participate in Church services, to breathe the fragrance of the Kingdom of Heaven, which is "the joy and peace of the Holy Spirit."

Thursday, February 27, 2025

A Prayer to the Panagia by Saint Ephraim of Katounakia for a Group of Children That Visited Him in 1993


Our sweet Mother, to these little children now that they have come to your fold, 
open your protective covering and bless them so that they may become chosen vessels, 
so that the Holy Spirit may rest in their souls, within their souls.

Our Panagia, our sweet Mother, our consolation, our strength, our illumination, 
help them to become heirs of those indescribable good things, 
for you are blessed unto the boundless ages of ages.

Source: From the book The Holy Mountain by Metropolitan Nektarios Antonopoulos of Argolis. Translated by John Sanidopoulos. 

Friday, October 4, 2024

Speech Given to Students of the Newly Opened Free of Charge Sunday School (St. John of Kronstadt)


Speech Given to Students of the Newly Opened Free of Charge Sunday School

By St. John of Kronstadt

My friends! A Sunday School has been opened for you today, with God's blessing, for free: and the books in it are ready for you and everything you need for studying. It is called a Sunday School because you will come to it on Sundays, and on other feasts of the Lord, and of the Mother of God.

Do not think that it is a sin to go to school on feast days. No, it is not sinful, but soul-saving. Rather than sitting at home, or doing something idle, or wandering the streets, it is better, without a doubt, to occupy yourself with study for an hour or two. Learning is light, which means that it is a good deed, and when is the time for a good deed, if not on a feast day? On a feast day you do not work, according to the fourth commandment of the Lord; according to that commandment, one must work six days a week, if there is no feast day, and on the seventh, that is, on Sunday, one must go to church – to pray to the Lord, our Creator, to venerate His most pure Body and Blood at the Liturgy, to listen to the word of God, to remember God's mercy to us, and to think about eternal life. For all of us, brethren, will be resurrected in due time for another, never-ending life in heaven. This is a very important matter, and that is why, among other things, the no work day of Sunday is given to us, that is why we must certainly go to church on Sundays, so that, having venerated Christ's resurrection, we may remember our own resurrection from the dead, in order to prepare our souls for a joyful, and not a sorrowful resurrection.

Saturday, July 27, 2024

When Saint Panteleimon Talks To One of Your Students


By Vasilis Frangos

Lately I have often been talking with D. who is in his first year of High School. He tells me that he likes History very much and is looking for the lives of various heroes in Byzantium. We were talking a lot about them yesterday. Yesterday, however, he told me that he was reading the lives of Saints, such as Saint Nicholas Planas, who was celebrating, and a Neomartyr, unknown to me. We used to say that the Saints are always by our side, when we talk about them and read their lives.

At that moment he spontaneously tells me that he especially loves Saint Panteleimon. To my question why him in particular, he replied that the Saint was a doctor and he would like to become a doctor himself. But the most shocking thing I heard at the end: he told me that he once saw Saint Panteleimon himself in his dream saying to him: