Faith In Today's World: Profanity
A reflection on the Second Commandment and the power of our words. Drawing from Exodus 20:7, Colossians 3:8, and Ephesians 5:4, this post examines how profanity contradicts our calling to imitate Christ. Rooted in Oriental Orthodox theology, it connects our speech to Baptism, Chrismation, and the Divine Liturgy.
Faith In Today's World: (Exodus 20:7)
Why is it acceptable to make fun of God’s name and Christianity but not of other religions? This discrepancy exists simply because we, as believers, are not rooted in God.
NEW YEAR REFLECTION (ISAIAH 43:18)
Isaiah does not speak here about forgetting history, but about abandoning a former way of life. In the life of the Church, remembrance is sacred when it is ordered toward God, and destructive when it binds the soul to sin, regret, or pride. This command to forget is a call to repentance.
PSALM 133:1
This verse begins with an invitation to look closely. Unity must be seen, guarded, and lived. David describes life together not as easy, but as good and pleasant, meaning it is both righteous and life-giving.
PSALM 42:1
This Psalm speaks from dryness. The soul longs because it has been separated from its source. Human beings are created from God and for God, and when life drifts from prayer and worship, the soul weakens.
PSALM 122:1
This verse does not begin with personal feeling, but with being called. David does not say that he chose on his own to go to the house of God. He rejoices because others said to him, “Let us go.” Movement toward God begins in obedience, not in self-direction.