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The First Sunday after the Epiphany AD 2025
The Gospel for the first Sunday after Epiphany tells of how the twelve-year-old Jesus stayed in the temple in Jerusalem and there manifested His divine authority: “All that heard Him were astonished at His understanding and answers." It was the same astonishment as twenty years later, when all the people “were astonished at His doctrine: for He taught them as one having authority, and not as the scribes.”
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The Second Sunday after Christmas Day AD 2025
The Gospel for the Second Sunday after Christmas Day is related to the Gospel of the Epiphany, which tells of the visit of the Wise Men from the Orient to Jesus and the subsequent story of the slaughter of the Holy Innocent of Bethlehem. The heartless King Herod, having heard from the Wise Men about the birth of the Messiah, decided to eliminate his supposed rival. Those who paid with their lives for his ambitions were innocent children, as almost always happens when a tyrant, fearing the loss of his power, goes on a rampage. Collateral damage, as it is called…
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The First Sunday after Christmas Day AD 2024
“The foolishness of God,” says St. Paul, “is wiser than men; and the weakness of God is stronger than men.” This “foolishness” and “weakness” of God is His self-giving love, the pouring out of His soul unto death, even the death of the cross.
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The Fourth Sunday in Advent AD 2024
Amirhon, who is originally from Tajikistan, is a vestry member of a little Estonian country church. He moved to Estonia a few decades ago, having previously lived in his homeland. Originally a Muslim, he became a Christian during his university years. The reason was the same as that of the Apostle Paul: he hated Christians and, to better fight them, he decided to get to know this “false religion” as well as possible. And so, at one point, he realized that his life and way of thinking had to change completely.
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The Third Sunday in Advent AD 2024
When John the Baptist sent his disciples to ask Jesus if He was the one who was to come, or if they should expect someone else, Jesus referred in His answer to what would happen to those who encountered Him: “The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear, the dead are raised up, and the poor have the gospel preached to them.”
The Greek word used when Jesus says that the blind “receive their sight” can be translated in a different way: they “look up”, they “raise their eyes”. This is interesting, even a little provocative, because if someone is blind, there is no benefit in raising their eyes – or is it?