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Reflection from His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon on the Great Feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos

Last week we celebrated the beginning of a new ecclesiastical year; now we mark the first great feast of the year, the birth of the Theotokos. The outer proclamation of the Gospel began with Christ’s Forerunner, whose conception we celebrate later this month, but the inner mystery of the Church, the Incarnation of the Word, begins with the Theotokos. Through her as through a gate that remained shut, the Son of God has entered into his creation, and henceforth we shall always know him as the Son of Mary. Though her role in our salvation was unique and unrepeatable, it does provide for us a model and a goal. With respect to the goal, we recognize that she bore Christ in her womb so that we could give birth to Christ in our lives and our hearts. ...

Read more here: https://www.oca.org/reflections/metropolitan-tikhon/reflection-great-feast-nativity-theotokos

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On Sunday, September 7 and Monday, September 8, 2025 His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon made an archpastoral visit to Saint Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary in Yonkers, NY, to celebrate the Feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos with the seminary community. This marked the first primatial visit of the new academic year. ...

More photos and information: https://www.oca.org/news/headline-news/his-beatitude-metropolitan-tikhon-visits-svots-for-feast-of-the-nativity-of-the-theotokos

Photo credit: Scott Strickland
Reflection from His Beatitude Metropolitan Tikhon on the Great Feast of the Exaltation of the Cross

The final chapter of the Didache refers to a sign of outspreading, or expansion, and many have understood this sign to be the sign of the Cross. On the Cross, Christ stretches out his arms in order to embrace all creation. In his Incarnation, he becomes small; on the Cross, he displays the magnitude, the unfathomable greatness, the sheer and inconceivable bigness, of divine love. Let us therefore make the sign of the Cross, the sign of this divine love, with reverence and deliberateness. This is not just a matter of rote external piety; it is a way constantly to call to mind the saving self-emptying and crucified love of our Lord and God and Savior Jesus Christ.

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2025/10/21 22:28:36
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