Repentance and Rescue

Depiction of the Jerusalem temple.

We can learn a lot from the Israelites. In Ancient Egypt, the Israelites were slaves. They were treated poorly and were not allowed to have any sons for fear that the Israelites would be the majority in Egypt. God saw their distress and rescued Israel from slavery in Egypt in an event called the Passover. God chose a man named Moses to lead his people out. God sent the angel of death to kill every first born son in every Egyptian household, but the Israelites painted blood on their doorpost and lintel. This meant that they were Jews and the angel of death passed over. As the Israelites were fleeing, Pharaoh and his army drowned in the Red Sea. 

After escaping from Egypt, God gave Moses ten laws he and his people were to follow. They were called the Ten Commandments. Just after being freed from the land where they had been enslaved, the Israelites disobeyed their creator. While Moses was on Mount Sinai retrieving the commandments, the people grew impatient. Although God had revealed himself on Mount Sinai with fire and smoke, they demanded an idol, so Aaron built a golden calf for them to worship. As the commandments were being handed down to Moses, the people of Israel were already breaking the first and second laws: Thou shalt not worship any god before me and thou shalt not make unto thee any graven images. In one instance, 3,000 men were killed by the angel of the LORD because of their disobedience and rebellion.

God then made a covenant with his people. It stated that when the people obeyed, they would be protected, but when they disobeyed, He would let their enemies triumph over them. After this, there is an obvious cycle repeated throughout the Old Testament. The people of God disobey god and are captured by their enemies. Then they repent, their enemies are overthrown, but then like a mischievous child, they return to their former sin.

After the age of Judges, the people of Israel demanded that the current Judge, a man named Samuel, give them a king. Wisely, Samuel warned that a king will force them to work hard and be a tyrannical ruler, but the people didn’t seem to care. Consequently, Samuel gives them a man named Saul to be the first king of Israel. At the beginning of Saul’s reign, he obeyed God and won many battles for Israel. God commanded Saul and his army to kill and destroy everything in one Canaanite nation, but Saul kept some of the spoils and donated it to the temple. Because of his sin, Saul’s son Jonathan would not inherit the throne, so when Saul died, the throne was given to a man named David.

During his childhood, David had killed a giant Philistine with a sling-shot. David was a good king, but committed one horrible sin. He committed adultery with Bathsheba, the wife of a man in his army, and then had her husband sent to the frontlines to get him killed. David then married her. He realized what he had done and was sorry for his misdeeds. Unlike Saul, David learned to obey God. We are all like the Israelites in our sin, but if we repent, God forgives and rescues us.

The Deserving Diplomatic Defender

By defending against invaders, challenging heresies, and leading his flock as the Bishop of Rome, my patron saint, Leo, rightly deserves the honor of being the first Pope to be called, “The Great.”

Orthodox icon of Saint Leo.

Leo was born in Tuscany, Italy, part of the Western Roman Empire, around 400 AD. By 431, he had been tonsured as a deacon in Rome and his zealousness for the Church was known outside the city. About the same time, Western Roman Emperor Valentinian III sent Leo to settle a dispute between Aetius, a military commander of Roman forces in Gaul, and Albinus, a consul. 

While in Gaul in 440, Pope Sixtus III died and Leo was elected to succeed him. During his reign, Leo defended against Dioscorus of Alexandria and Eutyches who believed in the Monophysite heresy that Christ was fully divine, but not fully man. In 451, the Great Bishop called the Fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon to condemn the heretics. The council concluded with the anathematization and excommunication of the heretical Dioscorus, Bishop of Alexandria, and the monk Eutyches. The next year, Leo persuaded Attila the Hun and his army to refrain from attacking the ancient city of Rome. In 455, Gaiseric, leader of the Vandal tribe, agreed to Leo’s requests not to kill civilians or raze the city. While Gaiseric kept mostly to the agreement, he did take some citizens as slaves during the sack. In addition to these diplomatic feats, Leo also wrote 96 sermons and 143 letters, of which the best known is his “Epistle to Saint Flavin.” 

The meeting between Pope Leo and Attila the Hun.

Leo reposed in peace in 461 after serving his flock for 21 years. He is venerated in the Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, and Anglican Churches, with his Orthodox Feast Day being celebrated on February 18. 

Without the guidance of Saint Leo, the Huns and Vandals could have destroyed the entire city of Rome and the Monophysite heresy could have continued to corrupt the Church for many years. Pope Leo was a truly deserving diplomatic defender of the Christian faith. As he said, “Virtue is nothing without temptation, for there is no conflict without an enemy, no victory without strife.”

Great Defenders and Holy Composers

In the first centuries of the church, men called Church Fathers forever changed the course of Christianity by defending against heresies and spreading the faith. Many of these Fathers are sainted by both the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. Origen of Alexandria, St. Basil the Great, and St. Polycarp are three important and imperative men of the early Christian Church.

While Origen of Alexandria is not a saint, he is considered a Church Father. He was born around 184 AD and spent the first half of his life working in Alexandria, Egypt. As a priest he wrote around 6,000 works and preached on every part of the Bible. Origen isn’t sainted because some of his views were proclaimed as heretical by the Fifth Ecumenical Council. Origen was said to have believed in the predestination of souls, which is the belief that everyone, even demons and Satan himself, would eventually receive salvation. He also supported the view of a hierarchy within the Trinity, that is the Father at the top, followed by the Son, and then Holy Spirit. And although he was against the Gnostic heresy, he apparently believed in the inherent evil of all material creation, the core principle of the Gnostics. On top of these accusations, he was said to have castrated himself. In 250, Origen was tortured for his faith and in 253 died of his wounds. Even though Origen is not a saint, he is a Church Father because of his works and martyrdom for Christianity. 

Origen of Alexandria.

St. Basil the Great was born in 330 AD and served as the bishop of Caesarea, in modern-day Israel. Basil is one of the three Great Hierarchs of Orthodoxy along with St. John Chrysostom and St. Gregory Naziazus. He’s also a Cappodocian Father with Gregory Naziazus and Gregory of Nyssia. As a bishop he fought the heresy of Arianism, the belief that Christ is not fully God, wrote the Liturgy of St. Basil the Great (which served as the regular Sunday Orthodox Liturgy until being edited and reformed by St. John Chrysostom), and helped destroy Arianism by participating in the writing of the Nicene Creed during the First Ecumenical Council of 325. Being a saint in both the Catholic and Orthodox churches, Basil is glorified mostly because of his fierce defense of Christianity against Arianism. In addition to this, Basil is also the Patron Saint of monasticism, exorcism, education, liturgists, and the country of Russia.

Icon of St. Basil the Great.

A disciple of John the Apostle and bishop of Smyrna, St. Polycarp, whose name means “much fruit,” was born in AD 65. During his time as bishop of Smyrna, he wrote the Epistle of Polycarp to the Philippians in which he strongly warns the Church of Philippi about heresy and apostasy. Polycarp is one of the three Apostalic Fathers alongside Clement of Rome and Ignatius of Antioch. Receiving the holy crown of martyrdom in 155, he was burned at the stake. However, when the saint was not touched by the flames, he was stabbed to death.

Orthodox icon of St. Polycarp.

By their writings, example, and works these three prominent fathers, Origen, St. Basil the Great, and St. Polycarp helped spread the Christian faith to the world, crush heresies, and compose influential writings.