Tag Archives: Jesus

Hedges of Protection

What keeps you and your family safe? Your house? Your guns? Your fitness or fighting ability? How about your faith?

When we are instructed by Paul in Ephesians 6 to “Put on the Full Armor of God”, this is not a task to be taken lightly. This act is not just something you do occasionally or once in a while, but EVERY SINGLE DAY as the enemy is constantly seeking for a weakness in your armor. A gap in your battle line. Your Achilles’ heel. The Armor of God protects us individually and like the Spartan Phalanx, we can interlock shields with our brothers and sisters in the faith to form an impenetrable wall of FAITH that the Devil and his cohorts cannot break through. Always remember that the Armor of God must always be maintained, and for it to work properly it MUST BE PUT ON. This is our individual hedge of protection.

As a corporate entity, the Children of God, the Body of Christ, are spread across all nations. Israel and Judah during the Divided Monarchy found themselves in quite tumultuous times. Having a King who did good in the eyes of the Lord placed a hedge of protection around the people. My Sunday School teacher (rest her soul) always used the metaphor of a dome or a bowl being placed over the Kingdom while a good king was head of state. This dome represented God’s hedge of protection from the evils of the world. When a bad king came in and led the people astray, the dome or bowl would be lifted and invaders or trouble would come rushing in. The prophets would be lifted up and would give warnings to the Kings and to the people to turn back to the Lord, but ultimately we know what happened to the 12 Tribes of Israel. The 10 Northern Tribes (The Kingdom of Israel) would be lost and scattered by the Assyrian Captivity, and the Kingdom of Judah (Southern two tribes) would ultimately be led into exile by the Babylonians (see chart below).

While it was a time of great apostasy and turmoil, it is highly resonable to consider that there were some people in the land who were righteous and true to the Lord, but still suffered through this strife. Their indiviual armor and small hedges of protection for their families would keep them afloat and keep them focused on the LORD. Their FAITH would earn them a seat with the Father in Heaven even though their mortal bodies be battered, beaten, and broken.

What’s the point of having arms and armament if it’s not to be put to use? No weapon formed against you shall prosper, but that does not mean they won’t be formed or used against you. Trust in the Lord, Our God. Trust in the Armor that He has provided you. Lock shields with your family, your brothers and sisters in Christ, and with Jesus, Himself, and together, we will emerge through the tumult as VICTORS!

Requirements

He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?

Micah 6:8 King James Version

Father God, Lord of Mercy, be with your children as we prepare for Lent. Help us to focus on YOU and understand you on a deeper level through our prayers, fasting, and study. Open our eyes, open our hearts, and open our minds as we grow closer to you. In Jesus’ name. Amen.

What does the Lord require of us daily? Our reading in Micah lays this out quite clearly. First, we are required to do justly. Justly is an adverb defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as “in a way that most people consider to be morally fair and reasonable.” As the Lord requires, we must follow His Commandments and apply them to others just as we expect them to apply them to us. Live a life that is above reproach and allow the Lord to work through us.

Second, we are required to love mercy. As with living a just life, we must also have mercy. Our LORD God is a merciful god as He loves us even when we are most undeserving. HIS mercy for us if far beyond our mortal comprehension. However, if we strive to have mercy in our lives upon people in our lives who have been dealt a bad hand or have wronged us in a way that we are able to forgive, then we can follow the example set by God.

Finally, we are required to walk humbly with the Lord. To be humble is not a sign of weakness. Quite the contrary. It is a sign of great strength to be able to swallow your pride, give glory to the Lord, and give thanks to Him for the talents bestowed upon you. Let your ACTIONS speak much louder than your words, and do not perform acts for accolade or praise. Let the Lord work through you daily and accept His blessings as you allow Him to bless others through your work.

Joshua 1:9 reads, “Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee whithersoever thou goest.” As we prepare for Lent, brothers and sisters, do what is required of you, and do it with great courage. This is what is required.

God Bless you all!

The King is Coming

Reading: Amos 9:1-10

The Season of Joy is upon us. Praise be to the Most High God! Yahweh, Lord of Hosts!

              This is a most exciting time of year. The time where we, as Christians, celebrate the Advent of our Savior. What is an advent? And who is our Savior? It is quite simple: Our King IS coming. But it wasn’t as the believers of the day thought.

              Advent, by definition, means the coming of a notable person, thing or event. In the case of Jesus, God, Himself, incarnated himself supernaturally into the Blessed Mother Mary and was delivered to us in a manger. This humble beginning is not in the slightest what was expected of the coming Messiah. In our reading we find a powerful ruler, executing righteous judgement upon the wickedness upon the Earth. Jesus, the mighty God whose wrath is swift and terrifying, thus eradicating evil from our world. The same Jesus we find in that lowly cave in Bethlehem is the same triumphant King at his return or second Advent.

God works in a fascinating way. By quietly entering the world without Pomp and Circumstance, the wicked forces of darkness were unable to track His movements into our realm. King Herod, despite his best efforts, was unable to prevent the coming of Jesus, the one TRUE KING. Jesus, who WILL return to bring eternal peace to the realm must first fulfill the bold prophecy of Amos. He confirms this later in His ministry as we find in The Book of Matthew, Chapter 10, Verse 34:

“Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.”

The King IS coming. We celebrate in this season His first advent, but joyfully in our hearts realize His second is imminent.

God bless you all. Merry Christmas.

Response: Abbot Tryphon – Broken

Broken
What To Do When We’re Broken

It is only human to become despondent when we have failed in keeping to our moral, ethical and spiritual standards, succumbing, instead, to temptation. Our Orthodox Faith teaches that we must be compassionate towards others, loving, quick to forgive, exemplar in our Christian living, and always demonstrating to the world that we belong to Christ. Yet we also know we fail, most of the time, in living up to the standards of the Gospels, appearing no different than the pagans.

We look to the example of the saints, and wonder why we seem so far removed from their Christ-like example of living the Gospels. Over and over, we sink in the muck and mire of sin, becoming broken, downtrodden, and sick. In our brokenness we betray the Gospels, our own standards of behavior, and the expectations of others. We know the truth of the words, “There is none good but One, that is, God (Matthew 19:17),” because we fail, over and over, in our own seeming inability to live as we believe.

We know we have been called to holiness by Christ, and that He gives us the strength, courage, and even the ability, to live our lives out in holiness. Yet, try as we might, we find ourselves utterly failing to live the Gospels, failing in our witness before others, and letting down our friends and family, with behavior that is anything but an example of Gospel living. We are broken, bordering on despair.

Nevertheless, even as we struggle with our sins, we must remember that we were specifically created by God for participation in His Divinity. We have been called by Him, and have become a Royal people, specifically created to participate and share fully in the life of God. The key to this life in God is to be found in repentance. Even in our brokenness, we must not give in to despondency, for our Saviour is quick to forgive. When we have found ourselves falling short of the glory of God, we must turn toward this very God in repentance, knowing that He is quick to forgive.

When we are broken, despair is the enemy, and should be seen as an emotion that has come from the Evil One. Hope and forgiveness are the gifts that come from God. During those times when we have failed in our Christian vocation, we must embrace the hope that comes with a repentant heart, and see, in our brokenness, the reminder that we are to always keep our hearts and minds in the knowledge that we have a God Who is quick to forgive. Despair is the enemy of our salvation, because in despair, the Evil One would have us believe there is no hope, and therefore no salvation. In our brokenness we must turn our gaze towards our Co-Suffering Saviour, the One Who lifts us up, out of our brokenness, making us whole, and granting us forgiveness and life.

Love in Christ,
Abbot Tryphon

RESPONSE

When you find yourself broken, remember that Christ was broken for us. We all fall short of His glory, but He loves us all the same. What Jesus endured during his crucifixion was one of the worst possible torments imaginable. Being whipped, stabbed, adorned with a crown of thorns, suffocating, and ultimately giving up the Ghost, He endured for us.

Life will get you down. You will slip into sin, fall flat on your face, and find yourself at rock bottom. Fear not, weary traveler. For the rock upon which your life is built IS Jesus. Sometimes you must be stripped of all the worldly things in your life and be left beaten and broken. It is there in that place that you will find comfort in our Lord Jesus. Allow Him to come into your life, fill you with His warmth and love, and tend to your brokenness.

Christ WILL make you whole.

Learn from your brokenness. You have to look back at times on those situations and debrief them in your head. What action or scenario caused the break? How did you respond? How could you have handled this situation without triggering the break? Working through these problems and refocusing your eyes on the LORD will see you through. We’re all broken creatures, but our Lord God mends us.

God bless you all.

-Tobinator

Response: All The World’s a Stage

Speech: “All the world’s a stage”

BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE

(from As You Like It, spoken by Jaques)

                                        All the world’s a stage,

And all the men and women merely players;

They have their exits and their entrances;

And one man in his time plays many parts,

His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,

Mewling and puking in the nurse’s arms;

And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel

And shining morning face, creeping like snail

Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,

Sighing like furnace, with a woeful ballad

Made to his mistress’ eyebrow. Then a soldier,

Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard,

Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel,

Seeking the bubble reputation

Even in the cannon’s mouth. And then the justice,

In fair round belly with good capon lin’d,

With eyes severe and beard of formal cut,

Full of wise saws and modern instances;

And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts

Into the lean and slipper’d pantaloon,

With spectacles on nose and pouch on side;

His youthful hose, well sav’d, a world too wide

For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,

Turning again toward childish treble, pipes

And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,

That ends this strange eventful history,

Is second childishness and mere oblivion;

Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.

RESPONSE:

I took a trip recently with my family to Atlanta, GA. For anyone who has ever been there (or any major city for that matter) you know that there’s one thing you can always count on: TRAFFIC. My daughter (8) and I were looking down out of our hotel window at all of the cars when I proposed a philosophical thought: Every one of those cars down has their own story.

In the digital age we are all put forth center stage, or so we think. From our “40,000ft View” we could literally see how far from the center we really were. EVERYONE you pass on the way to work, in the hallway, or rest beside in the pew has their own story. They have their own journeys. They have their own problems. They have their own triumphs.

We are not alone on our journey. You will find that you have much more in common with your fellow man than you think. Most people want to work to provide for their family, enjoy the fruits of their labor, and live long, happy lives. While there are forces that would hinder that progress, we have a much greater force on our side: The Lord God Almighty.

His single, unifying, all-powerful presence that lives within believers can overcome ALL obstacles. He has a guiding hand in all of our lives and even more so when we accept that Jesus is our Lord and Savior. Let Jesus be the Writer and Director of this play we call life. Follow His lead and the most beautiful performance will commence. One day, you might just meet everyone you saw from the top of that hotel and get to live their life through their own telling. Praising God for all eternity and hearing wondrous stories from all of those people sounds pretty grand to me.

God bless you all.