The Orthodox Church claims to go back to the beginnings of human life.
But when you examine the claim, you discover that there are more
beginnings than one. There is for example the beginning of Salvation
History with Creation and Adam; there is the beginning of corporate or
ecclesial life, with Abraham; there is the new beginning and the type of
the Resurrection which came with Noah and the flood. Then there is the
all-important new beginning when Israel came out of Egypt and settled in
the land of Palestine. Life there was in turn renewed by the reformation
of the fathers of Deuteronomy. Then there was another new beginning at the
time of the seventh century prophets, Amos & Co., which culminated in
the height of prophetic activity we call Isaiah.
Among all these new beginnings and reformations and restitution’s,
there have been three great and mighty manifestations of the Divine Glory.
The first, Creation, has already been mentioned and this culminated in the
birth of the first Adam. This was followed by the coming of the second
Adam, Jesus Christ, born of the Blessed Theotokos, that flower and scion
of the whole Hebrew race, Mary of Nazareth. This coming on earth of her
Son culminated in the Cross and His Resurrection. The final expression of
God’s power was the outpouring of the Holy Spirit at Pentecost which
gave birth to the creation of Christ’s Body, the ecclesial society of
the Church.
All these events and people are commemorated in the Orthodox Calendar
-- and this includes the important prophets of the Old Testament. One by
one, they all pop up in the daily unfolding and commemorating of our
Salvation History. Today, on 1st September, we commemorate at once all
those many and varied beginnings. Properly the day is called "The
Indiction" from the Latin, "to impose". This is a reminder
that Constantine the Great chose this day to impose tax each year on his
Roman subjects.
In this way September 1st became the start of a new year in the Roman
Empire and so eventually,in the undivided Church as well. In passing, it
is interesting to note that in Britain, our academic and judicial years
also begin at this time. These, it is claimed, we so arranged by St
Alfred, a great King, and founder of our educational system and by St
Theodore, the Greek-born Archbishop of Canterbury who reorganised the
dioceses of this country and their courts of justice. Strange, too, that
our fiscal or tax year, still begins on what was, in the old Julian
calendar, the Feast of the Annunciation, 25th March, and which, when
transferred to the new calendar in 1752 became, 5th April.
Other new year’s days abound. The new year of Our Lord, lst January,
is now no more than a gala celebration, and the Western Church regards
Advent Sunday as the start of its new year. The Jews and the Muslims; the
Hindu’s and the Chinese all have different new year’s days but amidst
all these, we stick to 1st September, and we have to be ready to defend
ourselves for this.
There appear to be three strands to its choice. The first has already
been mentioned. We saw that Constantine started his tax year on this date
and he was important to the early Church for ending anti-Christian
persecution and for legalising Christianity, so his lead was important.
This induced, secondly, the Bishops of the first Ecumenical Council in 325
to decree this day as the start of a new Church year. But strangely,
enough, it was also commonly believed that the Exodus from Egypt took
place during September, and the Orthodox Jewish New Year is also
celebrated today, and other areas of Judaism celebrate it later in the
month.
The third strand is that, tradition has the 1st September, as the day
when Jesus Christ chose to come out of his obscurity and, for the first
time, publicly proclaimed His mission, in His own home town of Nazareth,
as recorded in this morning’s Gospel. He read and then spoke on the 61st
chapter of Isaiah "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me because the Lord
has anointed Me to preach good tidings to the poor.....and to proclaim the
acceptable year of the Lord"(Lk.4.16-22).
When talking about "time" the Greek of the NT uses two
different words. Chronos refers, obviously, to chronological time,
calendar time, time that moves on, second by second, day by day and year
by year. And for all of us, this sort of time comes to an end when we die.
So St Paul warned the Ephesians:--"Look carefully how you walk, not
as unwise men, but as wise, making the most of the kairos because the days
are evil"(5.15). By using the Greek word "kairos" there, St
Paul means, not chronological time, but rather God’s time, which
stretches out into eternity and in which we are struggling to live now.
Jesus, we believe, lived kairos time in that He never lost or igored a
single moment for doing good. He used time to the fullest:-- teaching,
comforting, loving, preaching. Even when He was alone, He spent time in
prayer, communicating with His Father, to discover how best to use the
time that was left to Him on earth.
This new year can be for all of us a "year of Grace of the
Lord", when we realise that we are called, despite the calendar and
the chronos, we are called to live as best we can, in Kairos, in God’s
time, just because, as St Paul says, the days are evil. In our own
strength, we cannot guarantee that we will persevere, but on this first
day, we are called upon to look to OBL in a spirit of faith and
dedication. The Gospel tells us that "the eyes of all were fastened
on Him" We pray that on this first day, we might turn away from the
sin which does so easily beset us, and fix our eyes on Christ and Him
alone. We are called to use our chronos days, to enter into His kairos
ways.
But there is another aspect of life reflected in our Calendar today. We
began with the first act of God in our Salvation History, the Creation,
and in modern times, our Church has now designated 1st September as a
"Day of Prayer for the protection of the environment". It is
fully in keeping with our faithfulness to that great, Divine, act that we
respect God’s Creation. We are called to live within it, rather than
attempting to dominate it, and so ultimately, to destroy it. To pray for
the protection of the environment daily, is surely another way of
proclaiming it to be for us, an acceptable year for the Lord.
Creation began, and will continue, in Kairos, God’s time, but we
still have the duty during our Chronos, to protect it. So help us, God.
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