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From Gollum to Grace: Seeing Ourselves in the Light of the Saints
Reading the Evergetinos as a Mirror of Who We Are and Who We Are Meant to Be There are moments when reading the Evergetinos that feel like holding a pure and burning coal in the hand. The stories of the saints shine with such goodness and mercy that they seem almost impossible for us. Not because they are irrational or exaggerated but because they reveal a way of being that exposes the poverty of our own hearts. We glimpse in them what the human person becomes when grace has
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 183 min read


What Does a Blind Beggar See?
A Personal Reflection on Silence and the Fear of Teaching There is a part of me that longs for silence with a kind of desperation, as if only silence can keep me from unraveling. Not silence as escape or convenience, but the silence that strips everything away, the silence that teaches me who I am without role or title or task. A silence where I no longer speak with authority about anything because I know so little. A silence where the only voice worth heeding is the voice of
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 143 min read


The Vigil of the Heart: On Hesychia and the Fruit of Watchfulness
A reflection on St. Isaac the Syrian, Homilies 20:4–12 and 21:1–11 St. Isaac the Syrian speaks with the deep and experiential authority of one who has lived the word “hesychia,” not as theory but as the very air his soul breathed. In these passages, he opens the inner meaning of silence, night vigil, and the unbroken remembrance of God. What emerges is a vision of ascetic life as a slow, patient flowering of grace in the soil of obedience, attentiveness, and compunction. The
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 115 min read
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