Homily
on the Theophany
On
the day of the feast of Theophany--the Baptism of the Lord--it
is not out of place to remember another baptism: that baptism
which was performed over each of us Orthodox Christians, that
baptism at which each of us, by the mouth of our godparents,
gave a promise to God that he would always renounce Satan
and his works and would always unite himself, join himself
with Christ.
This, I repeat, is especially fitting for this present day.
The solemn rite of the Great Sanctification of Water will
be performed shortly. Its center, its main part, one could
say, is the majestic prayer wherein the Lord is glorified
and the grace of the Holy Spirit is called down upon the water
being sanctified. This prayer begins with the beautiful words:
Great art Thou, O Lord, and marvelous are Thy works,
and no word sufficeth to hymn Thy wonders. Whoever has
been at a performance of the mystery of Baptism and was present
attentively, knows that the prayer at the sanctification of
the water in which a man will be baptized begins with these
same words, and the first part of this prayer is completely
the same, both at the Great Sanctification of Water and at
the performance of the mystery of Baptism. And only later,
in the last part, does the prayer at the performance of the
mystery of Baptism change, as applicable to this mystery,
when a new human soul will be baptized.
And so, it would not do us any harm to remember those vows
given at Baptism on behalf of each of us. When a man is baptized
as an adult, as even now sometimes happens, and happened especially
often in antiquity, he himself makes the vows on his own behalf;
but if he is baptized in infancy, his godfather or godmother--his
sponsors, as the Church calls them--pronounce
these vows for him. And so these vows, in which a Christian
has promised God to renounce Satan and all his works and to
join himself, to unite himself with Christ, these vows are
not only forgotten by people, but many in general know nothing
about them or about the fact that these vows were pronounced
for them and that they ought to think a little about how they
must fulfill these vows.
And what if at the last day of the history of the human race
on earth on the day of the Dread Judgment it
turns out that a man (or his sponsors for him) made vows,
and he does not even know what the vows were and what was
promised? What will happen to such a man?
Think, brethren, about what it means to renounce Satan and
all his works and to join oneself to Christ.
The times are such now that a God-opposing bustle, in which
the enemy of the human race reigns, has taken possession of
humanity and, as was said in olden times, forces almost all
people to dance to its tune. All this bustle,
of which our present life is composed, is a God-opposing bustle,
in which there is no God, in which Gods enemy holds
sway and rules. If we made a vow to renounce Satan and all
his works, then, in fulfilling it, we ought to strive not
to stifle our soul with this bustle, but to reject it and
to remember how the Church says, One thing is needful
only one thing is necessary and to remember
that we must join ourselves with Christ, that is, not only
fulfill His commandments, but also endeavor to unite ourselves
with Him.
Think, then, about this, O Christian soul, on this day of
the radiant and great feast; think and pray that the Lord
send thee firm faith and the resolve to fulfill these vows,
and not to be swallowed up by the bustle of the world and
lose the tie with the Lord, with Whom thou didst promise to
join thyself for ever.
Todays feast is called the feast of the Lords
Baptism or the feast of Theophany; but those who know well
the church Typicon, know also that sometimes in this Typicon
it is also called the feast of the holy Theophanies
in the plural number.
Why? Here is why: Of course, that which the singers sang about
today God the Word appeared in the flesh to the
human race is the center of the commemorations
of the present feast day. The incarnate Son of God, of Whose
birth, when He was born, only a very few knew, appeared
to the human race; for His baptism is, as it were, His
solemn inauguration of His ministry, which He then performed
after that until His death and resurrection.
But at the very same time, the fact that precisely on this
feast the worship of the Trinity was made manifest,
as is sung in its troparion, is characteristic of todays
feast. All three Persons of the Holy Trinity appeared for
the first time in their separateness, which is also why this
feast, I repeat, is called the feast of the holy Theophanies.
Men heard the voice of God the Father: This is my beloved
Son, in Whom I am well pleased (on Whom My favor rests);
the Son of God accepted baptism from John (moreover, we know
from the Gospel that John the Baptist was, as it were, at
a loss when the Savior of the world came to him, and he attempted
to restrain Him); and the Holy Spirit in the form of a dove
descended from the Father on the Son. In this way, the
worship of the Trinity was made manifest for the first
time, which is why the Church sings thus in the troparion,
and why she also calls this feast the feast of the holy
Theophanies.
Christ the Savior appeared in order to begin His saving ministry.
Here, not so long ago, when there was another great feast
the Nativity of Christ we said that the Lord,
by his nativity in a poor cave, when He deigned to be laid
in a cattle manger, thereby emphatically rejected, as it were,
all earthly glory, all earthly splendor and magnificence,
for He did not deign to appear in royal chambers or rich palaces,
but precisely in those poor and modest conditions. And thereby
He immediately showed that He had brought to the earth a new
principle, the principle of humility.
Look, then, how He Himself, so to say, is true to Himself,
how even now on todays great feast He institutes the
very same principle of humility manifestly and undoubtedly
for us. For whither did He come? To the Jordan. Why? To be
baptized by John. But sinners came to John; they confessed
their sins to him and were baptized. But He was without sin,
could not be touched by sin, was absolutely free
of it and pure; yet nonetheless, He humbly stands in line
with other sinners, as if He were in need of this cleansing
washing with water. But we know that the water did not cleanse
Him, the most holy and sinless One; but it was He who sanctified
the water by deigning to be washed by it, as was sung today
during the sanctification of the water: Today the nature
of the waters is sanctified. And so, Jesus Christ brought
the principle of humility to the earth and was true to it
throughout the course of His whole life. But that is not all.
He has also left us this testament: Come and learn of
me; for I am meek and lowly of heart: and ye shall find rest
unto your souls.
Remember one more radiant, joyful, spring feast the
feast of the Annunciation.
Here the most blessed Virgin Mary hears the good tidings from
the Archangel how the incarnation of God will be accomplished
through her. What does her most holy, most pure and blameless
soul say when she came to her relative, Elizabeth, in order
to share her joy with her? She only says: My soul doth
magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Savior,
for He hath regarded the low estate [humility] of his handmaiden.
This humility was also the beauty of her spirit. From the
very account of the Annunciation, we know that the Archangel
appeared to her at that moment when she, having read the prophecy
of Isaiah concerning the incarnation of God from a virgin,
was not even thinking to apply this to herself, but only thought
in the depth of her humility: How joyful I would be
if I were the least handmaid of that blessed virgin.
And here stands the Archangel Gabriel before her with
his good tidings. The Lord, meek and humble Himself, regarded
her humility.
He also enjoined humility on us, contrary to the principles
of pride and self-love by which humanity today breathes.
Look, why are there so many disagreements among us, both within
the enclosure of the Church and in parishes? Because everywhere
men made red-hot by self-love are clashing; but if that humility
to which the Lord calls us would be found in us, none of this
would happen.
Let us, then, brethren, learn from our Savior, who as the
least sinner came to John in order to be baptized by him;
let us learn from Him this God-beloved and fragrant virtue,
without which, as the holy fathers have said, no other virtue
whatsoever can be perfect.
Amen.
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