The Prayer of St. Ephraim
As as we journey through Great Lent, Fr. Lawrence Farley looks at the Prayer of St. Ephraim.

As as we journey through Great Lent, Fr. Lawrence Farley looks at the Prayer of St. Ephraim.
Fr. Lawrence Farley comments on the Anaphora, which is a Greek word meaning “offering.”
Fr. Lawrence Farley speaks at Daniel Chapel at Furman University on February 6, 2018. Fr. Farley explores the nature and end of humankind from an Eastern Orthodox Christian perspective.
Fr. Lawrence Farley talks about his new book A Song in the Furnace, the message of the book of Daniel.
Fr. Lawrence Farley is convinced that his culture knows absolutely nothing about the true meaning of Christmas.
How the concept of punishment in the world to come was understood at the time of Christ.
North American popular culture, as brought into your home and heart by the North American media, is a very powerful force, and it seems that we too easily underestimate its transforming power.
Fr. Lawrence says it is safe to say that the allegorical method has fallen upon hard times in the scholarly world.
Do the words “God is love” mean God could never be wrathful?
We Christians share certain external similarities with the religions, but these external similarities can mask the inner meanings of the things we seem to share. In reality, everything in Christianity is different from the religions.
Fr. Lawrence continues his series and examines the correlation in the Scriptures between that which is clean and that which is unclean.
The Feast of the Elevation of the Cross could also be called The Feast of Byzantium.
It is easy to misinterpret Christianity as a religion like any other but Fr. Lawrence maintains it is unique.
I sometimes cannot help asking myself three liturgical questions whenever I visit churches which serve the Liturgy in the “classic” pattern I learned in seminary—all of those questions quite rhetorical.
In the Gospel reading Christ even now stands in our midst to speak to our hearts.
We regard it as “Scripture”, a holy text, and of course it is. But it is also a personal letter addressed and written to people other than ourselves.
In the original usage, the Trisagion was sung as a refrain to Psalm 80. The cantor would chant verses of the psalm as all walked in procession and the people sung the Trisagion hymn as its refrain after every verse.
The decrees and canons of the Provincial and Ecumenical Councils today often sound odd in our modern ears.
Fr. Lawrence continues his commentary on the Divine Liturgy with a focus on the Antiphons.
Fr. Lawrence offers commentary on the Divine Liturgy with a focus today on the Great Litany.
The so-called “Holy Fire” is the name given to the fire that appears on ends of the candles of the Patriarch of Jerusalem and others every Holy Saturday.
What does the Orthodox Church think about gay sex? The official answer is not hard to find.