This document is an Easter message from the Archbishop of Calcutta discussing the meaning and significance of Easter. It makes three key points:
1) Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, symbolizing victory over death and the promise of eternal life. It gives hope that even in the face of despair, a new beginning is possible with God's help.
2) Easter reminds us that through acts of kindness, forgiveness, and service we can overcome evil and help create a more just world. It calls Christians to follow Christ's example of commitment to human well-being.
3) Figures like Gandhi, Tagore, and Vivekananda saw service to humanity as a
The Philokalia is a collection of the writings of the Eastern Church Fathers beloved by the Orthodox but little known by many Catholics and Protestants. When reading the works of the Roman Stoic philosophers, I was struck by the commonalities between the stoic writings and the Philokalia, the shared lists of virtues and vices as well as the terminology, which made it clear that many of the writers in the Philokalia were drawing from Greco-Roman moral philosophy.
In their introduction, the translators tell us the meaning of the Philokalia. “Philokalia itself means love of the beautiful, the exalted, the excellent, understood as the transcendent source of life and the revelation of Truth. It is through such love that, as the subtitle of the original edition puts it, ‘the intellect is purified, illumined and made perfect.’ . . . The Philokalia shows the way to awaken and develop attention and consciousness, to attain that state of watchfulness which is the hallmark of sanctity.” “The Philokalia is an itinerary through the labyrinth of time, a silent way of love and gnosis through the deserts and emptiness of modern life, a vivifying and fadeless experience.” The Philokalia is a “summons to man to overcome his ignorance, to uncover the knowledge that lies within, to rid himself of illusion, and to be receptive to the grace of the Holy Spirit who teaches all things and brings all things to remembrance.” The Philokalia encourages unceasing prayer and the Jesus Prayer.
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Epictetus is my favorite Roman Stoic Philosopher. The writings of Epictetus are accessible and easy to read, consisting of one maxim after another, resembling the teachings of the early Church Fathers in the Philokalia, echoing many of sayings in the Gospels and Epistles of St Paul. Many of his writings were his recollections of the sayings of his Stoic teacher, Musonius Rufus.
To Epictetus, only the good can be truly happy, only the good can truly be free, tyrants may take all you own, but they can never take your most prized possession, your freedom of will; tyrants can throw you in jail, but they can never take away the freedom of your mind; tyrants can take your life, but they can never have your soul. Epictetus, the great philosopher of freedom, was a former slave, a slave to a freed man, and was both poor and a cripple, eking out a living by teaching philosophy.
Epictetus tells us of someone who stole his lamp one night, Epictetus got the better end of the exchange. For Epictetus only lost his lamp, but he kept his faith. The man who stole his lamp, in exchange for the lamp he consented to become a thief, becoming faithless.
I first learned of Epictetus from a series of Teaching Company lectures on Greek Moral Philosophers by Professor Timothy Luke Johnson. This a series of lectures that deeply affected me. The similarities between the stoic philosophers and the writings of the monastic eastern Church Fathers who preceded St Benedict, and to the Pauline Epistles and the Gospels, are so striking that I can truly say I am a better Christian for having read the Stoic Philosophers.
Likewise, the stoic philosophers are greatly treasured by Professor Johnson. He had by chance picked up a used book containing the writings of Epictetus and was deeply influenced by his teachings. It is puzzling why the stoic philosophers are so often neglected by modern scholars, they were far more highly prized in antiquity and by the early Christians and Church Fathers.
We include many more of the sayings of Epictetus in our video. Enjoy!
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The Philokalia is a collection of the writings of the Eastern Church Fathers beloved by the Orthodox but little known by many Catholics and Protestants. When reading the works of the Roman Stoic philosophers, I was struck by the commonalities between the stoic writings and the Philokalia, the shared lists of virtues and vices as well as the terminology, which made it clear that many of the writers in the Philokalia were drawing from Greco-Roman moral philosophy.
In their introduction, the translators tell us the meaning of the Philokalia. “Philokalia itself means love of the beautiful, the exalted, the excellent, understood as the transcendent source of life and the revelation of Truth. It is through such love that, as the subtitle of the original edition puts it, ‘the intellect is purified, illumined and made perfect.’ . . . The Philokalia shows the way to awaken and develop attention and consciousness, to attain that state of watchfulness which is the hallmark of sanctity.” “The Philokalia is an itinerary through the labyrinth of time, a silent way of love and gnosis through the deserts and emptiness of modern life, a vivifying and fadeless experience.” The Philokalia is a “summons to man to overcome his ignorance, to uncover the knowledge that lies within, to rid himself of illusion, and to be receptive to the grace of the Holy Spirit who teaches all things and brings all things to remembrance.” The Philokalia encourages unceasing prayer and the Jesus Prayer.
Please support our channel, we receive a small Amazon commission:
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Epictetus is my favorite Roman Stoic Philosopher. The writings of Epictetus are accessible and easy to read, consisting of one maxim after another, resembling the teachings of the early Church Fathers in the Philokalia, echoing many of sayings in the Gospels and Epistles of St Paul. Many of his writings were his recollections of the sayings of his Stoic teacher, Musonius Rufus.
To Epictetus, only the good can be truly happy, only the good can truly be free, tyrants may take all you own, but they can never take your most prized possession, your freedom of will; tyrants can throw you in jail, but they can never take away the freedom of your mind; tyrants can take your life, but they can never have your soul. Epictetus, the great philosopher of freedom, was a former slave, a slave to a freed man, and was both poor and a cripple, eking out a living by teaching philosophy.
Epictetus tells us of someone who stole his lamp one night, Epictetus got the better end of the exchange. For Epictetus only lost his lamp, but he kept his faith. The man who stole his lamp, in exchange for the lamp he consented to become a thief, becoming faithless.
I first learned of Epictetus from a series of Teaching Company lectures on Greek Moral Philosophers by Professor Timothy Luke Johnson. This a series of lectures that deeply affected me. The similarities between the stoic philosophers and the writings of the monastic eastern Church Fathers who preceded St Benedict, and to the Pauline Epistles and the Gospels, are so striking that I can truly say I am a better Christian for having read the Stoic Philosophers.
Likewise, the stoic philosophers are greatly treasured by Professor Johnson. He had by chance picked up a used book containing the writings of Epictetus and was deeply influenced by his teachings. It is puzzling why the stoic philosophers are so often neglected by modern scholars, they were far more highly prized in antiquity and by the early Christians and Church Fathers.
We include many more of the sayings of Epictetus in our video. Enjoy!
Please support our channel by purchasing these resources from Amazon:
Stoic Six Pack, Epictetus and Seneca:
https://amzn.to/36KNo8T
Practical Philosophy: The Greco-Roman Moralists
https://amzn.to/3rmSlOx
Please support our efforts, be a patron, at:
https://www.patreon.com/seekingvirtueandwisdom
Patrons can participate in online Zoom discussions of draft presentations we prepare for future YouTube videos.
God's Holy Temple: To Protect and Respect (by Lourdes E. Morales Gudmundsson) A Powerpoint presentation provided by the GC Women's Ministry Department.
No issue before the human mind to-day is
fraught with greater importance than a correct
apprehension of the significance of Jesus. He
has always compelled the reverent attention of
reflective and serious people. Their response
to His supreme religious genius demonstrates
how deeply it has absorbed the variant multi-
tudes who have expressed their consciousness
of Him in speech, in literature, in art, in archi-
tecture, and chiefly in their efforts to emulate
His example and to do His will.
Holistic integration of mystical aspirations and social commitment: Saint Kur...Saju Chackalackal
A study on the successful synthesis of mystical aspirations and social commitment in the person, life, and ministry of Saint Kuriakose Elias Chavara in the context of 19th century Kerala, India
This is a study of Jesus being the greatest wise man. He had the very wisdom of His father, and as you study His teaching you come to realize that no one ever spoke as He did, and no one was ever more clever in dealing with problems and issues. He had the greatest plan for the best life for time and eternity.
This is a study of Jesus as one who would not retaliate. He let himself be insulted and threatened but did not fight back, but let the outcome in the hands of His Father.
Who Is Jesus Christ for Us Today?
To say that Jesus Christ is the truth of the Christian story calls for further examination. It is one thing to assert that the New Testament describes Jesus as the Oppressed One who came to liberate the poor and the weak (Chap. 4); but it is quite another to ask, Who is Jesus Christ for us today? If twentieth-century Christians are to speak the truth for their sociohistorical situation, they cannot merely repeat the story of what Jesus did and said in Palestine, as if it were selfinterpreting for us today. Truth is more than the retelling of the biblical story. Truth is the divine happening that invades our contemporary situation, revealing the meaning of the past for the present so that we
are made new creatures for the future. It is therefore our commitment to the divine truth, as witnessed to in the biblical story, that requires us to investigate the connection between Jesus' words and deeds in firstcentury Palestine and our existence today. This is the crux of the christological issue that no Christian theology can avoid.
God's Holy Temple: To Protect and Respect (by Lourdes E. Morales Gudmundsson) A Powerpoint presentation provided by the GC Women's Ministry Department.
No issue before the human mind to-day is
fraught with greater importance than a correct
apprehension of the significance of Jesus. He
has always compelled the reverent attention of
reflective and serious people. Their response
to His supreme religious genius demonstrates
how deeply it has absorbed the variant multi-
tudes who have expressed their consciousness
of Him in speech, in literature, in art, in archi-
tecture, and chiefly in their efforts to emulate
His example and to do His will.
Holistic integration of mystical aspirations and social commitment: Saint Kur...Saju Chackalackal
A study on the successful synthesis of mystical aspirations and social commitment in the person, life, and ministry of Saint Kuriakose Elias Chavara in the context of 19th century Kerala, India
This is a study of Jesus being the greatest wise man. He had the very wisdom of His father, and as you study His teaching you come to realize that no one ever spoke as He did, and no one was ever more clever in dealing with problems and issues. He had the greatest plan for the best life for time and eternity.
This is a study of Jesus as one who would not retaliate. He let himself be insulted and threatened but did not fight back, but let the outcome in the hands of His Father.
Who Is Jesus Christ for Us Today?
To say that Jesus Christ is the truth of the Christian story calls for further examination. It is one thing to assert that the New Testament describes Jesus as the Oppressed One who came to liberate the poor and the weak (Chap. 4); but it is quite another to ask, Who is Jesus Christ for us today? If twentieth-century Christians are to speak the truth for their sociohistorical situation, they cannot merely repeat the story of what Jesus did and said in Palestine, as if it were selfinterpreting for us today. Truth is more than the retelling of the biblical story. Truth is the divine happening that invades our contemporary situation, revealing the meaning of the past for the present so that we
are made new creatures for the future. It is therefore our commitment to the divine truth, as witnessed to in the biblical story, that requires us to investigate the connection between Jesus' words and deeds in firstcentury Palestine and our existence today. This is the crux of the christological issue that no Christian theology can avoid.
Jesus Original Mission to Have a Holy Marriage - Holy Bride
Holy Family; Holy children, Holy grandchildren ...
Blessing Mankind into a new Holy Sinless Lineage.
Evangelii gaudium eng ch 5 spirit filled evangelizers
2016 jan- march Goethals News
1. for You are my Hope
Goethals NewsGoethals News
The Goethals Indian Library & Research Society, KolkataThe Goethals Indian Library & Research Society, Kolkata
Vol. XIX No. 1 Bulletin January - March 2016
Fr. J. Felix Raj, SJ
My Hope is in You,
a s t e r m a r k s t h e
horizon of Hope.
EEaster Sunday is the
occasion of Jesus Christ's
Resurrection – the Church
congregates every week to
celebrate and commemorate
theeternallifeof theLord.
Each Sunday is a celebration
filled into the empty tomb – a
conviction that Jesus as Christ is
alive.And, Christ blends into our
prayers the promise of Hope; of
peace, of assurance, of re-
generation.
The word Easter comes from a
Germanic root that is a cognate
of 'East', the site of the rising sun
– Easter is dawn, it is a metaphor
for a new beginning. Easter is a
The poor in spirit,
Those who mourn,
The meek,
Those who hunger and thirst
The merciful,
The pure in heart,
The peacemakers,
Those who are persecuted
Theirs is the kingdom of heaven
For they shall be comforted.
For they shall inherit the earth.
For they shall be satisfied.
For they shall receive mercy.
For they shall see God.
For they shall be children of God.
For theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Dying Rising
ritual of rebirth, of spring
heralded.
Death is inevitable, yet life is
lived and loved. As we remain in
close communion with Divine
presence, the cold denial of death
is defeated and dispelled by the
Easterly ecstasy of celebration of
theimmortalLord.
The Beatitudes of Jesus defines the aspects of
Dying into Eternal Life
2. 2
aster is the celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. “On the
third day he rose again” is the faith that Christians profess. Two facts prove the
Ehistoric event of the resurrection of Jesus: 1.The empty tomb; 2.TheApparitions
of Jesus to his disciples after his resurrection. The Gospels describe the event: Jesus was
put todeath, and herose againon thethirdday!
Easter is the celebration of the victory of Jesus over death and all the forces of evil that
led to it. It is the celebration of life, light and love. Easter thus depicts hope for a
humanity that finds itself in the clutches of death, darkness, hatred and despair. The
early Christians and Christians down the ages have experienced this hope in the
resurrection of Jesus. This new hope made it possible for the martyrs to lay down their
faithinJesus with thehope ofresurrectionand eternallife.
Pessimism rules the world today. Men and women, young people, even children seem to
be in despair. Greed, violence, poverty, suffering, selfishness and corruption seem
indestructible. In the midst of this, Easter reminds us of our potentiality for optimism. It
is possible to overcome the forces of evil; a new life, new beginning is possible, with God's
help. It is possible to eradicate evils in society and create a new social order - but all this
begins with oneself. The Chinese saying, “It is better to light a candle than curse
darkness” is applicable to each one of us.There are ample opportunities to light a candle
around us: a kind word, thoughtful gesture, humble service, forgiveness,
encouragement,appreciation,generosity,sharing and thelistcango on.
The message of Easteris life, light, love, hope, optimism, joy and all that enables us to see
the situations around us in a different / new perspective, and Jesus’resurrection makes
this possible. We can overcome even the greatest obstacles with God's help. Let us learn
to see miracles in our life, and make them happen around us, with God's help. Yet, it is
important to remember that cross and resurrection are integral parts of human
existence!
Our world, especially the poor and the suffering, needs the message of hope and love, of
light and life.The risen Lord Jesus gives us this inspiration. He had come to the world to
serve the poor, to heal the sick, to give them new hope. When the self-righteous men did
not like his radical and authentic way of love, option for the poor and sinners, they put
him to death. But goodness, love, hope cannot be killed! Truth cannot be suppressed. It
will bounce back to life and start giving new hope to many, life in this world and eternal
lifeinthenext!
I wish allthereadersofGOETHALSNEWSLETTERAHAPPYEASTER.
+Thomas D'Souza
Archbishop ofCalcutta
Thanks to Fr. Gaston Roberge, SJ for the donation of his 31 books
to the Goethals Indian Library and Research Soceity.
Archbishop’s Easter Message
3. 3
A S T E R ,
the most
a n c i e n tEannual Christian
festival, com-
memorates the
Resurrection of
Jesus Christ from the dead on the
Third Day of his burial after his
death by crucifixion at Calvary
around the year 30 CE. It is a
festival of hope of eternal life
destined forhumankind and of the
final restoration of the entire
creation in Divine fullness as
revealed in Christ's bodily
Resurrection.
The Easter celebrations begin with
Easter Vigil on the night of Holy
Saturday and continue through the
night, which is followed by the
Easter Sunday morning solemn
worship. The Vigil ritual is suffused
with rich symbols: the blessing of
the new fire, the baptismal water and
the Easter candle, the celebration of
baptism and the renewal of Christian
life, all centred on Christ's
Resurrection. The Easter candle lit
from the new fire that dispels the
darkness of the church symbolizes
the Risen Christ. It evokes readily
the thought of Christ's victory over
the powers of evil that conspired to
destroy the fundamental values of
truth, freedom, justice, mercy and
goodness ingrained in human nature
for which Jesus stood, and, therefore
was sentenced to a shameful death of
acriminalon theCross.
But the Resurrection reveals the
power of truth. It assures us that
darkness can never prevail, evil can
never have victory, injustice is never
the end of story and that human life
does not end with cremation or
graveyard. Easter proclaims that
truth alone triumphs. This was also
the deep-seated experience of the
sages and saints of ancient days of
this land who encountered the
Divine mystery as truth and raised
the mighty proclamation: “Truth
alone triumphs; not falsehood.
Through truth the divine path is
spread out by which the sages,
whose desire have been completely
fulfilled, reach where the supreme
treasure of Truth resides” (Mundaka
Upanishad,3.1).
It is impressive to see the candle
lights springing up and spreading all
through the darkened church as the
congregation shares the light of
Christ received from the Easter
candle and passes it on to others. It
signifies their shared faith in Christ
and reminds them that, through their
way of life, they are to be the bearers
of the hope that Christ brought to the
world. The exuberant joy expected
of the feast is expressed by the
Easter proclamation (exsultet),
composed in the fourth century by
St. Ambrose, the bishop of Milan. It
is an awakening hymn brimming
with a quality of mystery and
wonder sung in praise of Christ who
conquered the life-negating forces
and gave a definitive hope of
fullness of life to humanity. This
melodious hymn that animates the
Easter Vigil candle service echoes
with the universal longing for life
embeddedinhumannature.
Easter hope would not be
meaningful, probably not possible,
without an experience of new life
breaking through the seams of our
personal and collective history. This
happens when in the midst of
conflict and division we turn our
minds to thoughts of peace; when
enemies begin to speak to one
another and those who were
estranged in love join hands in
friendship and care for one another;
when nations seek the way of peace
together in human solidarity; when
understanding puts an end to strife
and hatred is quenched not by blood
but by mercy, when vengeance gives
way to forgiveness; when an
unexplained power of endurance
and strength invigorates us in the
perennial battle against hardship;
when a glow of inspiration gives
way to final self-acceptance after a
long period of doubt and confusion;
and when a flash of insight leads us
toadvanceinknowledge.
Human persons are essentially
beings on their way seeking to
realise their innate potentialities of
life in all variety. But this desire is
frequently impeded by trails and
deadlocks, and absurdity of death.
Precisely, the hope-principle rooted
in human nature motivates us to face
these dilemmas. Hope is the driving
power as long as we live. Nobody
can live without hope, even if it were
only for the smallest things which
give some satisfaction even under
the worst of conditions, even in
poverty, sickness, and loneliness.
Immanuel Kant, the most famous
philosopher of the eighteenth
century rationalism, who changed
the trajectory ofWestern Philosophy
by prioritising reason in pure
speculative thinking, concluded in
his classic, Critique of Pure Reason,
that all systems of thought were
ultimately concerned with the
question of what one might hope in
life?
Paul Tillich, a renowned theologian
of the twentieth century, elaborated
further on the importance of hope in
his Harvard lecture on Right to Hope
and said, “Without hope, the tension
of our life toward the future would
vanish, and with it, life itself. We
would end in despair… or in deadly
indifference.” With all their
diversity of beliefs, religions are in
accord in one great teaching: human
beings are immortal and their spirit
comes from a divine realm and may
Easter,By Fr. D. John Romus
Dean of Theology
Morning Star College
Barrackpore
a Festival of Hope
4. The Goethals Indian Library & Research Society, St. Xavier’s, 30 Mother Teresa Sarani, Kolkata 700016, India.
Tel: 0091-33-22801919 Email: goethalscal@gmail.com Website: www.goethals.in
Director: Fr. Dr. J. Felix Raj, SJ n Staff: Sudipto Ghosh, Avijan Mondal and Sunil Mondol
n n
(For Private Circulation Only)
eventually return there. Since the
earliest forms of spiritual thought,
this is the great promise and hope
that religions have offered to their
followers, though they differ in
details. Moreover, the hope-
principle that is part of human nature
leads people continuously to
elaborate utopias. Some of these
celebrated utopias that we often hear
are the Republic of Plato (+347
BCE), the City of Sun of Tommaso
Campanella (+1639), the City of
Eternal Peace of Immanuel Kant (+
1804), the Absolute State of Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (+ 1831),
the Proletarian Paradise of Karl
Marx (+ 1883), the Heaven of
Freedom of Rabindranath Tagore
(+1941) and the Total Amorization
of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (+
1955).
Seen in the backdrop of the
universal hope of humanity for life-
in-fullness, the Easter hope opens up
a new liberative horizon. It turns all
our utopias (nowhere) into topias
(somewhere in this world), because
Christ's resurrection gives us in this
world a foretaste, a fore glimpse of
the liberative future towards which
humanity and the entire creation
look, sighing and groaning in eager
longing (1 Corinthians 15:13;
Romans 8:11; 1 Peter 1:3).
Resurrection gives us a decisive
assurance that life-negating forces
in all manner of manifestations that
lacerated life, and death itself in all
its deadliness have been “swallowed
up in victory” (1 Corinthians 15:
54). It tells us that the last word in
our human destiny is not death but
life,notannihilationbutrestoration.
The Easter hope is not an escape
from our responsibility to this world
but remains loyal to it, and turns
lovingly towards all that is living
and alive. It leaves its decisive
marking in the present by inviting
the believers to follow the way of the
Cross, which is none other than the
way of commitment to the cause of
God as Jesus did. And the cause of
God is the cause of human wellbeing
as shown by Jesus at the cost of his
life. Faith in the crucified and Risen
Christ is a veritable call to remain
loyal to the contemporary human
realities and to earth. It empowers us
to love this broken world and to take
courageous initiatives to recreate
this world more humane and secure
tolive.
It means that all the creative and life-
nurturing endeavours, spiritual as
well as secular, get thereby, a divine
vista of meaning. This is seen in
parents caring and nurturing their
children, medical personnel who
care for the sick and the dying,
farmers toiling to produce food for
the human family, social and
political activists working for justice
and harmony in the society, teachers
enkindling knowledge in the minds
of students, artists creating a world
of beauty on the wounded earth,
scientists exploring the mysteries of
the world, and all who are
committed, in their own manner, to
usher in a more caring society. These
are the signs of the new creation
because the Resurrection of Jesus is
the unfolding of the depth of the
Divineimmanenceinthesecular.
The experience of the Divine
immanence in the persons and in the
secular realities has been a
characteristic marking of the
reformers of modern India. Gandhiji
a n d R a b i n d r a n a t h Ta g o r e
emphasised that service to humanity
is the way to God- realisation.
G a n d h i j i c a l l s G o d a s
daridranarayana [God of the poor]
(Young India, 4.4.1929), whereas
Tagore tells us to find God in the
toiling people (Gitanjali, God in the
World). Similarly, Swami
Vivekananda time and again
reiterated to his disciples that
selfless service is an expression of
God-realisation. Swamiji stressed,
“It is preferable to live on grass for
the sake of doing good to others…
You must give your body, mind, and
speech to the welfare of the world.
You have read -- look upon your
mother as God, look upon your
father as God -- but I say -- the poor,
the illiterate, the ignorant, the
afflicted -- let these be your God.
Know that service to these alone is
the highest religion” (Collected
Works, Vol. VI, 288). He further
clarifies, “After so much austerity, I
have understood this as the real truth
-- God is present in every Jiva; there
is no other God besides that… Who
serves Jiva, serves God indeed”
(CollectedWorks,Vol.VII, 247).
Easter reminds us that the Cross and
Resurrection reveal the mystery of
God's radical immanence in
humanity, and of humanity's deepest
insertion into the Divine. This
Easter experience is very significant
to India whose spirituality is shaped
by a deep experience of the
immanence of the Divine, while its
existential context is marked by
economic deprivation and social
inequality. Hence, to protect,
promote and nurture this spiritual
sense of our nation in collaboration
with all people of good will for the
creation of a humane social order is
our pastoral responsibility for which
the Spirit of the Risen Christ invites
us.