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Pascha Quotes

Quotes tagged as "pascha" Showing 1-3 of 3
Alexander Schmemann
“Thus on Easter we celebrate Christ鈥檚 Resurrection as something that happened and still happens to us. For each one of us received the gift of that new life and the power to accept it and to live by it. It is a gift which radically alters our attitude toward everything in this world, including death. It makes it possible for us joyfully to affirm: "Death is no more!" Oh, death is still there, to be sure and we still face it and someday it will come and take us. But it is our whole faith that by His own death Christ changed the very nature of death, made it a passage鈥攁 "passover," a "Pascha"鈥攊nto the Kingdom of God, transforming the tragedy of tragedies into the ultimate victory. "Trampling down death by death," He made us partakes of His Resurrection. This is why at the end of the Paschal Matins we say: "Christ is risen and life reigneth! Christ is risen and not one dead remains in the grave!”
Alexander Schmemann, Great Lent: Journey to Pascha

Alexander Schmemann
“...the liturgical traditions of the Church, all its cycles and services, exist, first of all, in order to help us recover the vision and the taste of that new life which we so easily lose and betray, so that we may repent and return to it. ... It is through her liturgical life that the Church reveals to us something of that which "the ear has not heard, the eye has not seen, and what has not yet entered the heart of man, but which God has prepared for those who love Him." And in the center of that liturgical life, as its heart and climax, as the sun whose rays penetrate everywhere, stands Pascha.”
Alexander Schmemann, Great Lent: Journey to Pascha

Alexander Schmemann
“We simply forget all this鈥攕o busy are we, so immersed in our daily preoccupations鈥攁nd because we forget, we fail. And through this forgetfulness, failure, and sin, our life becomes "old" again鈥攑etty, dark and ultimately meaningless鈥攁 meaningless journey toward a meaningless end. We manage to forget even death and then, all of a sudden, in the midst of our "enjoying life" it comes to us: horrible, inescapable, senseless.”
Alexander Schmemann, Great Lent: Journey to Pascha