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Sunday Homilies

Podcast by St. Catherine Church

English

History & religion

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About Sunday Homilies

A collection of homilies from services at St. Catherine Greek Orthodox Church.

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29 episodes

episode The Blind Man artwork

The Blind Man

Today we read about our Lord's encounter with a man who was born without eyes. Due to his blindness, he was forced to beg near the Temple in Jerusalem. Many people knew him and his physical condition, for they would pass by him on a regular basis. When Jesus and His disciples came near to the blind man, the disciples asked Jesus if this man's blindness and birth defect was due to sin. Jesus said that in this man's case, it was not due to his sin or his parent's sin but allowed to manifest the glory of God. As we shall see, the glory of God was indeed manifest both in this man's life and in many others through the miracle of this healing. Jesus chose to heal this man in a remarkable and dramatic way to reveal that He was God and to show that He chooses to use His creation as an agent of His divine grace to create that which did not exist before. In this case, Jesus, the Son of God, spits on the ground, making a moist clay from the dust. He applies this clay to the empty eye sockets and commands the blind man to wash in the pool of Siloam, engaging the man's free will and faith. As soon as the man obeys, the clay upon his empty eye sockets is transformed into fully functioning eyes that before did not exist, granting the man perfect vision. Finally, our good and loving God orchestrates this miracle in such a way that it includes as many witnesses as possible: the parents, the disciples, neighbors, onlookers, the Pharisees and others in the Temple. Even this healed blind man is given the opportunity to publicly offer his own testimony to verify the truth of the miracle and become the teacher to a segment of Jewish religious leaders and supposed “teachers.” The end result is manifold: The blind man, now healed, becomes a disciple; many witnesses, including the parents, now have ample evidence to become believers; and Jesus's reputation as a healer and the possible Messiah in contrast to the ineptitude of the Pharisees becomes more widely known.

18 May 2026 - 16 min
episode The Samaritan Woman artwork

The Samaritan Woman

Today is the fourth Sunday after Pascha. This Sunday of the Samaritan Woman marks a transition in focus from the Resurrection toward Pentecost. The living water Jesus promises to the woman at the well invites us to turn our attention to the action of the Holy Spirit inside a disciple of Christ. Even the dialogue between Jesus and this woman indicates the action of the Holy Spirit upon the heart and mind of this interesting woman. It is vital to remember that Jesus goes out of His way, breaking normal procedure for Jews, to go intentionally into Samaria rather than around to meet this specific woman. When He asks her for a drink, she shows her surprise through her response: “How is it that you, a Jew, ask a drink of me, a woman of Samaria?” Jesus immediately raises the level of engagement from the mundane to one of spiritual truths. This Samaritan Woman tries to stay focused on the practical, but Jesus raises the stakes of their conversation to the level of ultimate salvation and the very real obstacles she has in her personal life that He could not know about unless He were God. She does not quite reach this conclusion but settles for thinking He might be a prophet. Jesus again responds in such a way as to raise her thoughts above the prophets to the Messiah they promised. By the end of their brief encounter at the well, this woman forgot all about collecting water for her family and left the well believing she had just met the very Messiah Himself. Her conviction is so strong and her repentance so great that her own family and many of her fellow villagers also become disciples of the Lord Jesus. This encounter from Scripture is amazing, but what happens in her life after this event is also inspiring. After convincing her entire family, they were all baptized. This woman received the name Photini, which means “illumined one,” for she went from living in the dark to entering the light through her meeting the Light of the World. St. Photini and her entire family traveled all over the Roman Empire sharing their testimony and preaching the reality of the cross and resurrection to all who would listen. Their success at converting thousands reached the ears of the emperor. He had them arrested, tortured and eventually martyred for their faith. When the emperor heard how St. Photini became a Christian at a well, he cruelly threw her into a deep and dry well wherein she gloriously passed from this life into eternal life in her Lord's Kingdom.

11 May 2026 - 17 min
episode The Healing of the Paralytic artwork

The Healing of the Paralytic

The Healing of the Paralytic On this Third Sunday after Pascha, we witness the dramatic healing of a man paralyzed for thirty-eight years. Apparently, this particular paralytic was all alone, for year after year, he lay by these pools of Bethesda hoping someone would help him into the water after the stirring. Jesus intentionally comes to this paralytic, knowing his exact circumstances. The Holy Fathers of the Church placed this gospel reading on this Sunday of Pascha to show the connection between our Lord's power over life and death with His power over every sickness and infirmity of the human body. Imagine the atrophied and withered state of this paralytic's body after thirty-eight years of paralysis! With just a word, Jesus straightened and strengthened the man's body and made him whole. The disciples of Christ and everyone else present witnessed this man's miraculous physical transformation with their own eyes. It is necessary to point out two other interesting aspects of this healing. First, Jesus asks the paralytic before the healing an interesting question: “Do you want to be healed?” We might think this question unnecessary and obvious, but by asking this question, Jesus seeks to engage this man's free will and his faith. Jesus is not simply interested in this paralytic's physical health. He is supremely interested in his spiritual health and his eternal well-being. It is out of Jesus ultimate concern and love for this man that we point out the second interesting aspect of this amazing encounter. Jesus says to the man after he has been healed and then questioned by the Jewish religious leaders, “See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse befall you.” Here Jesus makes the connection in some cases between sin and physical consequences to that sin. We do not know what the paralytic may have done to suffer his paralysis, but it does make sense that sinful or bad decisions on our part can lead to physical or temporal consequences and suffering. Both the miraculous healing and our Lord's warning afterwards show His great love, unfathomable mercy, and His desire for a continued relationship with this healed paralytic, that he may become a devoted disciple and utilize his second chance of health to continue a life of faithfulness and repentance.

3 May 2026 - 13 min
episode The Myrrh-Bearing Women artwork

The Myrrh-Bearing Women

Faith and Courage When the time had come for Christ to be taken down from the cross, Joseph of Arimathea, a highly respected Jewish leader, approached Pilate to ask for Jesus's body. Although other followers of Christ hid in fear, Joseph did not do likewise. His high position in Jerusalem didn't deter him from seeking out the body of Christ, the one they had crucified. Instead, his faith gave him great courage to approach Pilate. Joseph's example of faith shows how God gives courage to those who seek to do good. With the help of others he began the process of preparing Christ's body for burial, laying Him in a grave and sealing it with a stone. However, they were unable to complete the usual Jewish burial customs before the Sabbath. For this reason, on the first day of the week, the myrrh-bearers faithfully went to the life-giving tomb to finish preparing Jesus body. These faithful women were not paralyzed by fear of the Jews, like the Apostles, nor did the knowledge of the obvious obstacle, that is the stone blocking the tomb, deter them. If the myrrh-bearers did not possess such bold faith they would have never attempted to finish the burial rights. Loving the Lord, they were filled with courage. As a reward for their faith the myrrh-bearing women were the first to receive the joyful news from an angel of resurrection. What more glorious blessing could they have received? The example of the myrrhbearing women demonstrates how the merciful Lord rewards our every good intention. Showing how God blesses many times over those who place even a small bit of faith in Him. The Church draws special attention to these faithful people, Joseph of Arimathea and especially the myrrh-bearing women, on the second Sunday following Pascha each year. In both cases they bear witness to how people receive more courage when they act with faith and love towards God. By disregarding the social pressure and danger these true followers of Christ present us with a lasting archetype of Christian discipleship. God does not let the smallest decision of faith go unnoticed; He repays every good intent as He did with the myrrh-bearing women.

27 Apr 2026 - 13 min
episode Homily From Saint John Chrysostom artwork

Homily From Saint John Chrysostom

Holy Pascha—The Feast of All Feasts The foundation of our Christian Faith is the empty tomb of Christ. As St. Paul said, “If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile, and you are still in your sins” (1 Cor. 15:15, 17). The Christian assurance is that death has been vanquished through Christ's death on the Cross and that the way to heaven has been opened by our Lord Jesus. Although all human beings must experience death, this “first death” does not have the last word. Through Christ's resurrection, death has lost its sting, its permanence; it has been transfigured into sleep. When Jesus rose from the dead early Sunday morning over two thousand years ago, He ended the undefeated reign of death. Since that glorious day, Jesus bestows everlasting life on all those who believe in Him and become His disciples through holy baptism. This is what the Apostle Paul meant when he said: “We were buried therefore with Him by baptism into death, so that as Christ was raised from the dead, we too might walk in newness of life. For if we have been united with Him in a death like His, we shall certainly be united with Him in a resurrection like His” (Rom. 6:4-5). This is why we call the feast of Jesus's resurrection Pascha. Jesus fulfills the Old Testament feast of Passover by becoming THE Lamb of God to end all other “Passover” sacrifices. Death after Christ's resurrection is the ultimate pass-over to eternal life. Christ's historical resurrection becomes the centerpiece of our entire Church Year. Every Divine Liturgy is a mini-Pascha. All other feasts in the life of the Church receive their essential meaning from our Lord's resurrection. We spend over fifty days every year preparing for the Feast of Pascha, and then we stay in this Feast of Paschal glory for forty days, reminding one another of this Christian fact: Christ is risen! Truly He is risen! “O death where is your victory? O death, where is your sting? Death is swallowed up in victory!” (1 Cor. 15:55, 54)

13 Apr 2026 - 4 min
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