EPISTLE: Hebrews 1:1-12; 2 Timothy 2:1-10
GOSPEL: Mark 2:23-3:5; John 15:17-16:2
EPISTLE: Hebrews 1:1-12; 2 Timothy 2:1-10
GOSPEL: Mark 2:23-3:5; John 15:17-16:2
Sixth Hour: Isaiah 3:1-13
Vespers: Genesis 2:20-3:20; Proverbs 3:19-34
Sixth Hour: Isaiah 2:11-21
Vespers: Genesis 2:4-19; Proverbs 3:1-18
Sixth Hour: Isaiah 2:3-11
Vespers: Genesis 1:24-2:3; Proverbs 2:1-22
Sixth Hour: Isaiah 1:19-2:3
Vespers: Genesis 1:14-23; Proverbs 1:20-33
A Reading from the Ladder of Divine Ascent, appointed for the Third Hour on Clean Monday. Reading: Step 1, verses 1-7.
NOTE: After today, the various homilies and other readings that we have been posting in this Daily Lectionary feed are being pulled out into a new Church Fathers podcast. You can add the feed to your podcast using this direct URL: https://theforerunner.squarespace.com/church-fathers-readings?format=rss
Isaiah 1:1-20
Genesis 1:1-13
On Cheese-Fare Sunday we begin to read the book of Chrysostom’s Hexaemeron.
Homily 1 on Genesis: On the Beginning of the Holy Season of Lent (PDF)
Homilies on Genesis 1-17 (Fathers of the Church, Vol. 74). Robert C. Hill, translator. 1986.
Cheesefare Sunday: Then the reading of Oration XVI of Saint Gregory Theologian, On his Father’s Silence, Because of the Plague of Hail, which beginneth: Why do ye infringe upon the approved order of things?
Introduction from Nicene & Post-Nicene Fathers: “THIS Oration belongs to the year A.D. 373. A series of disasters had befallen the people of Nazianzus. A deadly cattle plague, which had devastated their herds, had been followed by a prolonged drought, and now their just ripened crops had been ruined by a storm of rain and hail. The people flocked to the church, and finding S. Gregory the elder so overwhelmed by his sense of these terrible misfortunes that he was unable to address them, implored his coadjutor to enter the pulpit. The occasion gave no time for preparation, so S. Gregory poured out his feelings in a discourse which was in the fullest sense of the words ex tempore. its present form, however, as Benoit suggests, may be due to a later polishing of notes taken down at the time of delivery.”
On Cheese-Fare Saturday we read the homily of Saint Ephraim on the Fathers who have reposed.
On the Fathers who have Completed their Course (PDF)
Translated by Archimandrite Ephrem Lash
EPISTLE: Romans 14:19-23; 16:25-27
GOSPEL: Matthew 6:1-13
On Cheese-Fare Friday: In the refectory we read the homily On Fasting by Saint Dorotheus.
Dorotheos of Gaza: Discourses and Sayings
Cistercian Studies Series: Number Thirty-Three
Translated Eric P. Wheeler
1977
On Friday morning of Cheese-Fare Week, we read the first homily of Great Basil On Fasting, which beginneth: Sound the trumpet at the new moon.
Read out of On Fasting and Feasts: Saint Basil the Great (SVS Press), trans. Susan R. Holman & Mark Delcogliano
At the SIXTH HOUR: Zachariah 8:7-17
At VESPERS: Zachariah 8:19-23
On Cheese-Fare Thursday, we read the Homily of Saint Anastasius, Abbot of Mount Sinai.
Note: No published English translation of this homily is available. The version shared here is a provisional translation prepared with digital tools (Google Translate compared against ChatGPT) and human revision, offered for reading while a more formal translation is lacking. Caveat emptor.
EPISTLE: Jude 1:11-25
GOSPEL: Luke 23:2-34, 44-56
On Wednesday morning of Cheese-Fare Week, we read the second homily of Saint Basil the Great On Fasting, which beginneth Comfort Ye.
Read out of On Fasting and Feasts: Saint Basil the Great (SVS Press), trans. Susan R. Holman & Mark Delcogliano
On Tuesday morning of Cheese-Fare Week, we read the Homily of Saint Basil the Great On the Giving of Thanks.
Read out of On Fasting and Feasts: Saint Basil the Great (SVS Press), trans. Susan R. Holman & Mark Delcogliano
At the SIXTH HOUR: Joel 2:12-26
At VESPERS: Joel 3:12-21
Note: by tradition, Divine Liturgy is not performed on Wednesday and Friday of Cheesefare Week, so there are no epistle or gospel lessons appointed.
EPISTLE: Jude 1:1-10
GOSPEL: Luke 22:39-42, 45-23:1