His Eminence Archbishop Elpidophoros
Homily on the Feast of Saint Gregory the Theologian
January 25, 2020
Saint George Orthodox Cathedral
Beloved Clergy and Faithful of the Vicariate,
Today my heart is overwhelmed with joy as I stand in your
presence – in this Cathedral of Saint George – and behold your faces
beaming with the love of God and the faithfulness that you demonstrate
as a community of believers. This Vicariate, under our Most Holy
Ecumenical Patriarchate and Archdiocese is a true success story of
Orthodox Christianity in America: a shining example of how tradition,
culture, language, and spiritual heritage all live together, nurturing
and nourishing each other in a dialogue of love, peace, and faith.
By your determination and your resolve, you have kept faith with
the Mother Church of Jerusalem. You have remembered and honored the
well-springs of belief that you inherited from the lands of Palestine
and Jordan. And have been shown to be the most loyal children of your
Mother Church of Constantinople, the Ecumenical Patriarchate which loves
and cherishes you as a most precious community of believers here in the
United States. You have even gone beyond the borders of language and
culture to embrace many converts to Orthodoxy – both clergy and laity.
This is a great and wondrous testimony to your strength of purpose and
commitment to our Holy Orthodox Faith, a commitment that I can plainly
see you are passing down to the future generations in the faces of your
beloved and precious children.
Therefore, what better day for my first visit with you, and the
solemn liturgical celebration of our kinship with the Ecumenical
Patriarchate of Constantinople, than this Feast of a truly remarkable
Archbishop of Constantinople, Saint Gregory Nazianzen, whom the Church
calls “Theologian”. Although his own ecclesiastical life was difficult
and filled with many political and social challenges, he overcame them
all and achieved the vision of God that, to this day, informs us how to
speak about God – what is called “theology” – how we understand God in
Trinity: Father, Son and Holy Spirit, One God.
And you, my beloved children in the Lord, are accomplishing the
same achievements as this great Saint every day as you live your
Orthodox Faith. Whenever and wherever human beings gather in any
organized way, there will always be questions and challenges. This is
only natural. What is supernatural is our ability, through the love of
God the Father, and the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the
operation of the Holy Spirit in our hearts, to rise above the small
differences and see a vision of the magnificent love of God that He has
for every creature.
This is what Saint Gregory the Theologian did, even as he
suffered many indignities and injustices. He overcame every obstacle to
preserve and uphold the Faith, and in so doing became a permanent star
in the heavenly constellation of the Saints. We call this constellation
“The Three Hierarchs” – whose own Feast-day comes in just five days,
when, with the other shining stars of Basil the great and John
Chrysostom, the Church celebrates the luminaries who enlighten our path.
And so you also, my beloved brothers and sisters, are also called
to be a Divine constellation in the celestial firmament: a
constellation of God’s love, God’s mercy, God’s forgiveness, and God’s
compassion. Like the stars in the night sky, you all shine with a
differing glow – some brighter, some farther, some closer – but all of
you stand in relation to one another. Together you manifest a pattern of
all those elements of the Faith I mentioned before: tradition, culture,
language, and spiritual heritage. You are all part of the picture of
this precious Vicariate, and indeed of the whole Body of the Church.
That is the inner beauty of the Church, that we are all members of one
another, as Saint Paul writes to the Romans (12:5).
Therefore, I rejoice with you this day and I shall carry the
memory of our communion in the Holy Spirit with me long after I leave. I
pray that you also will remember my paternal words to you, and look
upon one another with love, and see the brightness in each other,
knowing that God Himself has placed you together into this venerable and
honorable Vicariate like the stars in heaven, and that together with
your esteemed clergy, you are the Church, the Body of Christ, the Chosen
and Elect of the Household of God.
May God always keep you and your families in His perfect peace and harmony. Amen.