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CATECHESIS & DAILY INSPIRATION
The Venerable Parasceva [Petka] of Epibatima, Thrace
Reflections and Daily Inspiration
A believer is not one who thinks that God can do everything, but one who believes that he will obtain all things. Faith paves the way for what seems impossible...

TODAY'S RECOMMENDATION
The Early Church
(Discovering Orthodox Christianity)

Featuring Dr. Demetrios S. Katos and Dr. James C. Skedros, this video discusses the Early Church from the beginning through the Ecumenical Councils.

Discussion Questions:
  1. How was Jesus looked upon during His time? How did people receive Him?
  2. Some people call the Orthodox Church "the ancient Church". What does that mean?
  3. How was Christianity influenced by its connection and relationship to the Roman Empire or the wider culture of the time?
  4. What is an Ecumenical Council and what is its purpose?
  5. How do the events of the first millennium still influence the Orthodox Church today?

FROM THE NEWS
Icons Remind Us
That God Became Man
Source: Out of Egypt
Remembering the Fathers of the Seventh Council
FR. JAMES GUIRGUIS | 25 OCTOBER 2020

The 7th ecumenical council, a universal council of the east and the west, tells us that icons are not only good, but absolutely necessary. They are a continual reminder that God is no longer understood as simply an invisible spirit. God is understood as having a Son, who Himself took real human flesh, real human existence. Who was born on an actual day in history, in an actual place, with an actual human mother from whom He received His actual human DNA. St. Peter writes “For we did not follow cleverly devised myths when we made known to you the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but we were eyewitnesses of his majesty.” 2 Peter1:16

Chisinau | On his birthday, Metropolitan Peter "wiped away a tear and brought hope"


On Saturday, the day when His Eminence Petru turned 74, at the headquarters of the Metropolitan Church of Bessarabia in Chisinau, 22 wheelchairs were distributed for people who cannot afford them. It was the first batch of a larger donation offered in collaboration with the Tighina Association in Bucharest.
Read Article: https://basilica.ro
SAINT OF THE DAY

OCTOBER 27 / OCTOBER 14
The Venerable Parasceva [Petka] of Epibatima, Thrace

This glorious saint was of Serbian descent, and was born in the town of Epivat between Selymbria and Constantinople. St. Parasceva’s parents were wealthy, devout Christians. They also had a son, Euthymius, who was tonsured a monk during his parents’ lifetime, and later became the famous Bishop of Madytos. The virgin Parasceva always yearned for the ascetic life for the sake of Christ. After her parents’ re- pose, she left her home and went first to Constantinople, then to the wilderness of Jordan, where she lived the ascetic life until old age. Who can express all the labors, sufferings and demonic temptations that St. Parasceva endured in the course of her many years? In her old age, an angel of God once appeared to her and said: “Leave the wilderness and re- turn to your homeland; it is necessary that you render your body to the earth there, and your soul to the habitation of the Lord.” St. Parasceva obeyed, and re- turned to Epivat. There she lived for two years in ceaseless fasting and prayer, then gave up her soul to God and took up her abode in Paradise. St. Parasceva entered into rest in the eleventh century. Over the course of time her relics were translated to Constantinople, to Trnovo, again to Constantinople, and then to Belgrade. Her relics now repose in Romania, in the town of Iasi. In Belgrade, the well of St. Petka miraculously heals the sick who draw near with faith in God and love for this saint.