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The Triodion
O Creator of all above and below,
as Thou receivest the thrice-holy hymn from the angels,
so also from mankind receive the Triodion.
He who lives like a Pharisee is far from the Church,
for Christ is received within, O ye humble of heart.
Lenten Synaxarion: Sunday of the Publican and the Pharisee
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With God on this present day we begin the Triodion, the hymns of which were composed by
many of our holy and God-bearing Fathers, inspired by the Holy Spirit according to their
worthiness. The first of all was the great author Cosmas of Maiuma, who composed the three
odes (symbolic of the Holy and Life-Creating Trinity) for the Great and Holy Week of the
Passion of our Lord and God and Savior Jesus Christ. After him others of the Fathers,
including Theodore and Joseph of the Studite Monastery, following his zealous example,
arranged the services of the other weeks of the Holy and Great Forty-day Fast, reserving
them at first for the use of the Studite Monastery. Furthermore they composed and arranged
hymns, seeking them and collecting them from other books of the Fathers. Since, according
to the Triodion, Sunday, the celebration of the Resurrection, is the first day of the week
as well as the last or eighth day, they prescribed the first canticle of the canon to be
sung on the second day of the week, i.e. Monday. The second canticle was prescribed for
Tuesday, the third day of the week, the third canticle for Wednesday, the fourth canticle
for Thursday, the fifth canticle for Friday, and the sixth and seventh canticles for
Saturday. The rest, the eighth and ninth canticles, are prescribed for every day.
It must be known, however, that although it is called the Triodion, it does have services
with other than three-canticle canons. It is so named because the majority of the services
have three canticle canons, especially during Holy Week. For it was our Holy Fathers' idea
that through the entire Triodion would be commemorated in a concise form all God's benefits
to us from the beginning, using it as a reminder for all of us that we were created by Him,
and were exiled from Paradise through the tasting of the fruit, rejecting the commandment
that was given to us for our knowledge, and we were cast out through the envy of the arch
villain serpent and enemy, who was made to crawl for his arrogance.
That we remained cut
off from the benefits of Paradise and were led by the devil. That the Son and Word of God,
having suffered in His mercy, bowing the heavens, descended and made His abode in the Virgin
and became man for our sake, showing us through His life the ascent into the heavens,
through humility first of all then fasting and the rejection of evil and through His other
deeds. That He suffered and rose from the dead and ascended once more into heaven, and He
sent down the Holy Spirit upon His holy disciples and Apostles, who all proclaimed Him to
be the Son of God and the most perfect God. And that once more the divine Apostles acted
through the grace of the most Holy Spirit and gathered all the saints from the ends of the
earth through their preaching, filling the world on high, which was the intention of the
Creator from the beginning.
Now the purpose of the Triodion intended by the Holy Fathers on these three present feasts
of the Publican and the Pharisee,
the Prodigal Son, and the
Second
Coming is a kind of
preparatory lesson and stimulation to prepare ourselves for the spiritual labors of the
Fast, having put aside our usual corrupt habits. First of all they present to us the
parable of the Publican and the Pharisee, and they call the week following precursory. For
those who desire to go off to do military battle, first ascertain the time of the battle
from the leaders, so that having cleaned and polished their weapons, and preparing well all
their other matters, and having removed all obstacles from their path, they earnestly go
forth to their labors, taking the necessary supplies. Often before battle they tell
anecdotes and tales and parables to incite their hearts to zeal, driving off idleness,
fear, despair and other inadequate feelings.
So the divine Fathers herald the coming fast
against the armies of demons as a passion which holds fast our souls to cleanse ourselves
of the poison accumulated over a long period of time. Not yet possessing those benefits,
let us strive to obtain them, and arming ourselves properly, so let us set off to the
labors of the Fast.
Now the first weapon among the virtues is repentance and humility. And the temptation to
attain the greatest humility is pride and arrogance. So they place before us first of all
this present trustworthy parable from the Divine Gospel. It encourages us to shun the
desire for the pride and arrogance of the Pharisee, and to cultivate the opposite desire
of the Publican for humility and repentance. For the greatest and most grievous passion
is pride and arrogance, since this is how the Devil fell from the heavens before the
morning star and was cast into darkness. Because of this Adam, the father of our race,
was driven from Paradise through partaking of the fruit.
Through this example the Holy
Fathers encourage all not to be proud of their successes, but always to be humble. For the
Lord sets Himself against the proud, but He gives grace to the humble. Better a man who has
sinned, if he knows that he has sinned and repents, than a man who has not sinned and
thinks of himself as righteous.
For Christ said, "I say to you that the Publican went
down to his house justified rather than the Pharisee." This parable reveals that no one
should exalt himself, even though he has done good deeds, but rather should always be
humble and pray from his heart to God, for even if he should fall into the most serious
sin, salvation is not far off.
Through the prayers of all Thy holy hymnographers, O Christ our God, have mercy on us.
Amen.
Translated from Triodion, siest' Tripesnets: Triod' Postnaya, Moscow, 1904, by Robert
Parent.
Reprinted with permission from J.Sanidopoulos Mystagogy Site
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