ise

Episode 186: Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, Season 4 (with Hibbah Kaileh)

Christina and Emma invite Hibbah to join the conversation around the fourth season of the Amazon Prime Original, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. They discuss questions of what it means to be a woman, different types of friends, and community. All that, plus what they're cooking!




ise

The Pharisee and the Publican

Is pride derailing your spiritual life? The season of Great Lent helps us see our need for repentance and humility.




ise

Bearing Witness to the Risen Christ

We are called to bear witness of the resurrected Lord, along with St. Thomas, who sought to know Christ through a personal experience with Him.




ise

Sunday of the Publican and Pharisee

Fr. Philip LeMasters calls us to open our lives to the Holy God in humility, following the example of the Publican.




ise

Christ is Risen!

Fr. Philip LeMasters preaches on the Gospel reading from Thomas Sunday.




ise

Gratitude Gives Rise to Faith

Given what we do know about the divine mercy we have received, gratitude must become an abiding characteristic of our lives. That means that we must become like the Samaritan leper in today’s gospel reading.




ise

Don't Be a Pharisee This Lent: Sunday of the Pharisee and the Publican

In preparing for Great Lent this year, we must remain on guard against the temptation of self-exaltation in any form.




ise

Forgiveness and the Journey Back to Paradise in Lent

As we begin our Lenten journey, we remember today how Adam and Eve stripped themselves naked of the divine glory and were cast out of Paradise into a world enslaved by death. During Great Lent, we follow the path that leads back to Paradise.




ise

Grounding Our Lives on the Mercy of Christ, Not the Praise of Others

Across the centuries, the Lord has raised up such unusual saints in order to shock us out of our complacency about the alleged harmony between the narrow way leading to the Kingdom and what passes for a conventionally respectable life in any time or place.




ise

The Tree of Life that Leads Us Back to Paradise

The Cross is truly the Tree of Life through which we return to the blessedness of Paradise.




ise

How to Pray Like the Publican, Not the Pharisee, This Lent

We must devote ourselves to prayer, fasting, almsgiving, forgiveness, and other forms of repentance in the weeks ahead if we are to open the depths of our brokenness to the healing of our Lord’s humble, suffering love. That is the only way to become like the tax collector in spiritual clarity, for he was aware only of his sin and need for God’s mercy. We must know the true state of our corruption and weakness as he did, if we are to enter into the joy of the Lord’s resurrection.




ise

Returning to Paradise Through Humility

Lent calls us to “put on the Lord Jesus Christ, and make no provision for the flesh, to gratify its desires.” We must do so in order to accept the great dignity of beloved sons and daughters called to return to Paradise through His Passion.




ise

Living in “One Flesh” Union with the Risen Lord

In order to follow our Risen Lord into the joy of the resurrection, we must also open our deepest personal struggles and wounds to Him for healing. Our bodies are not evil, but we have all distorted our relationship to them. Instead of pursuing a disembodied spirituality that ignores how God creates and saves us as whole persons, we must embrace the joy of His victory over death by living as those who are in a “one flesh” communion with the Risen Lord in every dimension of our existence.




ise

The Temptations of Pride, Possessions, and Praise

Due to pride, we often crave words and actions from others that distract us from seeing ourselves clearly and instead fuel illusions of self-importance and self- righteousness. When doing so becomes a settled habit, we can easily find ourselves attempting to use religion to serve our egos instead of being focused on offering ourselves to the Lord.




ise

The Prince of Peace Is Born to Restore Us to Paradise

Even as the circumstances surrounding Christ's Nativity were not peaceful by conventional standards, welcoming the Prince of Peace into our lives requires embracing the inevitable tension of mindfully entrusting ourselves to Him as we come to share more fully in His fulfillment of human person in the image and likeness of God.




ise

Lent is the Journey Back to Paradise Through the New Adam

May every step of the journey lead us further away from exile and closer to our true home, the Paradise that our Lord has opened to us through His glorious resurrection on the third day.




ise

Christ is Risen! Indeed, He is Risen!

In order to follow our Risen Lord into the joy of the resurrection, we must open our deepest personal struggles and wounds to Him for healing.




ise

Obedience to the Risen Lord Overcomes the Paralysis of our Souls

The plight of the paralyzed man shows us the common condition of fallen humanity. None of us took the initiative in bringing salvation to the world and this fellow did not ask Christ to help him or even know His name. The Lord graciously reached out to him, nonetheless, asking the seemingly obvious question, “Do you want to be healed?” The Savior’s words should challenge each of us because we often become so comfortable with our weaknesses, desires, and habits that we do not think that we need healing at all.




ise

Those Who Have Received Christ's Merciful Generosity Must "Go and Do Likewise"

It is terribly tragic when people fall into the delusion of thinking that they love God and neighbor, when in reality they are using religion to serve only themselves and the false gods of this world. One symptom of doing so is to narrow down the list of people who count as our neighbors to the point that we excuse ourselves from serving Christ in all who bear His image and likeness. When we do so, we disregard not only them, but our Lord Himself, the God-Man born for the salvation of all. Our actions then reveal that we are not truly united with Him because we seek to justify ourselves by serving nothing but our own vain imaginations.




ise

Eucharistic Worship as an Experience of Paradise

Fr. John discusses eucharistic worship as an experience of paradise.




ise

A Pilgrimage to Paradise: Egeria and the Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem

Fr. John discusses the design, history, and importance of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.




ise

The Theme of Paradise in Byzantine Icons

Fr. John explores specific examples of icons and the way in which they manifested early Christendom's experience of the kingdom of heaven.




ise

Paradise in Early Christendom's Hymns of Lent and Pascha

Fr. John looks at some of the actual texts of early Christian hymns and the way in which they gave expression to the vision of early Christendom.




ise

The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism V

Fr. John looks at a couple of consequences of St. Augustine's anthropology in the West.




ise

The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism in the West VI

Fr. John describes the desanctification of the world that began to occur in the time leading up to the Great Schism.




ise

The Rise of Russian Christendom I

Fr. John discusses the baptism of Saint Vladimir and shares an introductory anecdote about the death and canonization of Saints Boris and Gleb.




ise

The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism III

Fr. John addresses the foundations in the West of a growing pessimism about man's condition, paying particular attention to Augustine.




ise

The Rise of Russian Christendom II

Fr. John discusses the Christian statecraft of early Christian Russia.




ise

The Third Rome II: The Rise of Muscovite Russia

In this episode Father John describes the rise of the Muscovite state within Russian Christendom, and the way its Orthodox leaders began to see themselves as heirs to the fallen Byzantine Empire.




ise

The Fall of Paradise I: Reformation Muenster as the New Jerusalem

In this anecdotal introduction to the final reflection of Part 2 of the podcast, Father John relates the extraordinary story of a Reformation-era town that declared itself the kingdom of Christ on earth, a "New Jerusalem." Expressing a profound absence of God in the world, however, the story of Reformation Muenster was in fact a sign of the fall of a Christendom centered upon the experience of paradise.




ise

The Fall of Paradise III: The Case of John Calvin

In this episode Fr. John explores the life of Protestant father John Calvin and the reformer's contribution to the Reformation project.




ise

The Fall of Paradise IV: The Spirit of Calvinism

In this episode Father John discusses a few tendencies in Calvinism that would serve to undermine the place of paradise in Reformation Christendom, especially the doctrine of "total depravity" and the spiritual anxiety that accompanied it.




ise

The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism in the West I

Fr. John discusses the dignity of man according to the Greek Fathers




ise

The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism in the West II

Fr. John contends that to understand the coming of the Renaissance and its humanism, one really needs to understand how in the West the doctrines about man became increasingly pessimistic.




ise

The Fall of Paradise V: The Cosmology of Calvinism

In this episode Fr. John discusses ways in which Reformed cosmology represented a shift from the heavenly immanence of paradisiacal Christendom toward the heavenly transcendence of utopian Christendom.




ise

The Fall of Paradise VI: The Reformation of Worship

In this episode Fr. John discusses Reformed attitudes toward worship, and the ways in which western Christendom's liturgical and sacramental foundations were eroded when they were put into practice.




ise

The Fall of Paradise VII: From Communion to Commonwealth in Puritan England

In this episode Father John explores the way in which the loss of sacramental experience among Calvinists led to the rise of a political ideology that would unintentionally lay the foundation for utopia.




ise

The Fall of Paradise VIII: The Wars of Western Religion

In this final episode of Part 2 of the podcast, Fr. John discusses the catastrophic wars that broke out in western Christendom during the Reformation age. These wars, along with other forces unleashed by developments in the Reformation and earlier, would ultimately result in the loss of Christianity's legitimacy, leading to the rise of a modern, secularized form of Christendom centered upon the experience of utopia.




ise

The Rise of Anthropological Pessimism IV

Fr. John continues to discuss St. Augustine by looking first at his notorious doctrine of original sin and its impact on the conception of man in the West.




ise

The Fall of Paradise II: The Reformation of Western Christendom

In this episode Father John describes some of the most noteworthy effects of the Protestant Reformation on Western Christendom, emphasizing the decline of a sacramental basis for civilization and the rise of a primarily moral one.




ise

Introducing The Age of Paradise

Fr. John Strickland talks about the newly released book The Age of Paradise. The book is available at store.ancientfaith.com.




ise

The Premise of Lamp for Today

In her inaugural episode, Dr. Humphrey lays the groundwork for her new series.




ise

Humility that is Heard in Heaven: The Sunday of the Publican and the Pharisee

We consider the humility of Jesus and the Theotokos in the Presentation, as well as the reason why humility is so important, as seen in our readings for Divine Liturgy this Sunday (2 Timothy 3:10-15; Luke 18:10-14), in the light of Hezekiah’s plea before God in 4 Kingdoms 19:9-20 and our Lord’s own pattern in Philippians 2: 5-11.




ise

Preparing to Prepare: The Sunday of the Publican and the Pharisee

This week, as we approach Great Lent, Dr. Edith Humphrey helps us prepare our minds by focusing upon godly humility, as seen in Job, in the model laid out for Timothy by St. Paul, and in the well-known parable of the Publican and the Pharisee.




ise

A Promise is a Promise?: The Sunday of All Saints

Hebrews 11:33-12:2 presents us both with heroes who “succeeded” by outward appearances, and those who met affliction. We look to Exodus, Deuteronomy, Psalm 119, and especially Job to help us see how God makes many promises to His people, but crowns these with the gift of Himself, both in Jesus Christ, and in the promised Holy Spirit. It is this great gift that the ancient righteous anticipated, and that we have joyfully celebrated with them this week.




ise

Continue in the Things That You Have Learned! The Sunday of the Publican and the Pharisee

After completing our analysis on the troparia, kontakia, and theotokia, we turn to reading the epistles for Divine Liturgy, beginning with this week’s section from 2 Timothy. The Apostle Paul’s words to this young leader are applicable to everyone, not simply to those who lead the Church, since the Scriptures, Old and New Testament, are for all. We seek to understand the Apostle’s instructions by reference to Psalm 118 (MT 119), and by remembering those who have suffered for their faithfulness—most especially our Lord Jesus himself.




ise

Light from the Psalter 9 : Arise, O Lord!

Psalm 3, sung during Sunday Matins, is full of various “arising” actions. We understand its drama in the light of David’s trouble with his son Absalom (2 Sam/Kgdms 15-18), the Psalm that Jesus prayed from the cross, Isaiah 60, and some wise ancient commentators.




ise

The Parable of the Pharisee and the Publican

"The Parable of the Pharisee and the Publican" from The Parables of Christ by Spiritual Fragrance Publishing (2012)




ise

Welcoming the Christ Child: David the Psalmist and King Solomon the Wise

Welcoming the Christ Child: Family Readings for the Nativity Lent, "David the Psalmist and King Solomon the Wise," by Elissa Bjeletich, illustrated by Jelena Jeftic (Sebastian Press, 2017).




ise

Queen Abigail the Wise, Chapter 1

Queen Abigail the Wise, Chapter 1, written and illustrated by Grace Brooks. Create Space (2015) Available from Amazon