
“Beginning [this week], Orthodox Christians abstain from meat; has it any meaning apart from the ascetic, the disciplinary? Yes, it has, I think. There is a frightening passage in the ninth chapter of Genesis. After the flood, when mankind has become even weaker than before, less rooted in God, more tragically alone, more tragically dependent upon the created because it has lost communion with the uncreated, God says to Noah and his people:
“‘From now on all living creatures are delivered unto you as food; they will be your meat, and you will be their terror….’ That is the relationship which human sin, the loss of God in our lives, has established between us and all the created world, but particularly, in a particularly painful, monstrous way with the animal world. And our abstention from meat in the time of Lent is our act of recognition; it is also — oh, to such a small extent! — an act of reparation. We are the terror of the created world, we are those who destroy it, we are those who mar and pollute it, yet we are called originally to be its guide into eternity, into God’s glory, into the perfect beauty which God has intended for it.

“We were called to make of this world of ours God’s own world, God’s own Kingdom — in the sense that it is His family, the place where He lives among His creatures, and where the creatures of God can rejoice in Him and in one another. Let us therefore, to the extent to which we are faithful to the call of the Church, remember that apart from being an act by which we try to free ourselves from slavery to the material world, our fasting is an act of recognition of our sin against the world and, however small, a real attempt to make reparation for it, bring a testimony that we understand, that we are heartbroken, and that even if we cannot live otherwise, we live with a pain and a shame, and turn to God and to the world, which we treat so atrociously, with a broken and contrite heart. Amen.”
-Metropolitan Anthony of London, reposed 2003
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These are interesting thoughts about our relationship with what we eat and how we react to our environment.
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Wow! I had never read this before – I’ll be saving it.
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This is so interesting. A perspective on fasting I hadn’t heard before. And, in the evangelical world I certainly never heard anything acknowledging anything uncomfortable about our “dominion” on this planet.
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I didn’t remember that word “terror” either. Dominion was good at the beginning, but we failed ultimately and God seems to have made adjustments for us.
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This is as wonderful as we are terrible.
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Reblogged this on ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN FAITH AND LIFE and commented:
Most sobering! I didn’t remember that word “terror” in Genesis 9.
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