All Saints of North America Orthodox Church · Phoenix, Arizona

Orthodox Church on the west side of Phoenix Arizona including Sun City, Surprise, Peoria, Glendale, Litchfield Park, Buckeye, Tonopah, and more

  • Home
  • About
    • Clergy & Leadership
    • ASONA Mission Statement
    • New Visitor Information
    • How to Become Orthodox
    • For Orthodox Visitors
    • List of Activities for Orthodox Christians Desiring to Transfer to ASONA
    • Saints of North America
  • Faith
    • Statement of Faith
    • About Orthodox Christianity
    • The Correct Understanding of Being Born Again with Fr. Josiah Trenham
    • Orthodox View of Salvation by Steve Robinson
    • Welcome Home! Evangelicals Come Home to Orthodoxy
    • What happens to those who have never heard of Jesus?
    • To Sincere Converts to the Orthodox Faith, and those who are Seeking
  • Catechesis
    • New Member Class
    • List of Activities to Complete Prior to Baptism
    • Online Catechism Lessons
    • Audio Lectures
    • Bible Survey Lessons
    • The Mystery of Confession
    • Christian Names and Patron Saints
  • Education
    • Mystagogy
    • The Faith
    • Eucharist: Sacrament or Symbol?
    • Eucharistic Bread: Leavened or Unleavened?
    • Welcome to the Orthodox Church! (Videos)
  • Directions
  • Calendar
    • ASONA Calendar
    • Paschal Greetings from Around the World
    • When Someone Dies
  • Articles
  • Contact
    • Donate Now
    • GIVING Page
    • ASONA Legacy Society
    • The Book of Needs
  • New Member Class
  • Calendar of Services
  • Sisterhood of St. Olga
  • Prologue of Ohrid
  • Ready
  • Ecclesioclasm

“When It’s Safe” means NEVER

August 18, 2020 By Fr. John Peck [edit]

by Fr. Geoffrey Korz

At every liturgy in the Orthodox Church, just before the singing of the Nicene Creed, the priest or the deacon intones the words, “The doors! The doors!” This call dates back to the earliest times, when the doors of the church had to be barred shut, to prevent outsiders (in those days, Roman soldiers) from entering the church, witnessing those who confessed the faith, seizing them, and killing them.

Being a Christian was not safe.

Centuries later, under the Muslim Turks, Crypto-Christians – those who lived publically as Muslims, but secretly as Orthodox Christians – attended Liturgy in secret churches, often hidden beneath secret doors in the floors of their own homes, or in unknown caves. In rural villages, Orthodox priests sometimes posed as Muslim imams just to maintain their cover. If such a village of Crypto-Christians was discovered, everyone – from the old people down to the infants – was put to the sword.

Being a Christian was not safe.

Centuries later, under Communist regimes, faithful Christians would meet secretly in grey concrete apartment blocks, where priests would baptize for little ones who had been brought by their grandmothers, without the knowledge of the parents – a legitimate excuse for the parents to give to the atheist authorities if the family was ever caught. In the most severe Communist regimes, a handful of faithful would gather outside a city or town for a clandestine nighttime Liturgy, served by a priest brought in from far away to avoid the prying eyes of local authorities. In all these cases, the faithful knew, if they were found out, the punishment would be a swift execution, or worse – a slow and painful death in a concentration camp.

Being a Christian was not safe.

In the last few months, faithful around the world have experienced the closure of our churches, the prohibition of the public celebration of Holy Week, and the effective ban by bishops and civil authorities in different places on the reception of Holy Communion. In most places, churches have now reopened (at least in part).

Yet formal studies and informal observations show that about one-third of those who regularly attended holy services at the start of this year have now become accustomed to staying home on Sundays and feast days, and have not returned to church.

Perhaps good habits have been broken. Perhaps laziness has set in. Perhaps the lure of Sunday breakfast in bed has proven seductive.

Yet what has covered all the human laziness and brokenness behind the spiritual falling away is a single self-deception.

These are the words, “I will return to church when it is safe again.”

Curiously, one does not hear the same phrase repeated in relation to the liquor store – i.e. I will return to the liquor store when it is safe again. Nor does one hear it applied to the purchase of groceries: grocery stores seem somehow protected from all sicknesses, and remained so throughout the recent worldwide crisis.

Neither does one hear this phrase when it comes to the workplace – i.e. I will refrain from making an income, because the risk to my health is too high. I will return to work when it is safe again.

No, it seems only churches suffer from the unique level of danger – just as they did throughout the earlier part of this year, making them more risky than public transport and dollar stores combined.

The truth is, in the current climate of madness, many Orthodox Christians have not only shifted from realistic medical precaution to social hysteria, they have also found social hysteria to be a most convenient cloak for avoiding anything inconvenient or difficult.

Have to visit a relative? Not until it’s safe again.

Have to finish some difficult job? Not until it’s safe again.

And how about going back to church every Sunday morning…?

Brethren, attending the holy services of the Orthodox Church – Sundays or feast days – has never been safer than it is today. The truth is, however, it has never been safe to be a Christian.

In the catacombs around Rome rest the remains of more martyrs for Christ than live in my home city – over half a million martyrs. Being a Christian and going to church was always a risk for them – and so it will be for every generation of Christian, unto ages of ages.

So please, kindly set aside the idea that you will return to the holy services “when it’s safe”. That day will never come.

You will either make up your mind to live as a Christian and return to church, or you won’t.

HT

Source

Share the post "“When It’s Safe” means NEVER"

  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Email
  • Bookmark

Filed Under: General [post-edit]

All Saints of North America Orthodox Church

18700 N. 107th Ave Unit#5
Sun City, AZ 85373

(928) 910-2186

RSS Orthochristian.com

  • 100th anniversary of Russian church in Paris suburb
  • How a Choir Woman Prevented a Young Woman from Taking Her Own Life on the Eve of Pascha
  • Churches During the Great Patriotic War
  • Righteous Job: A Symbol of Hope Through Suffering

RSS LifeSite News

  • This Baby Was Saved When Her Mom Changed Her Mind During the Abortion
  • Frank Pavone Seeks Reinstatement to Priesthood Under Pope Leo XIV
  • Pro-Life Advocates March for Life in Liberal Oregon to Protest Abortion

Official Telegram Channel of the W American Diocese
Official Instagram account of the W American Diocese
Official Facebook page of the Western American Diocese

RSS Journey to Orthodoxy

  • Mass Baptisms Around the World at Theophany
  • Belfast parish baptizes 10+ in Irish Sea
  • Orthodox Liturgy celebrated in ancient Welsh church for first time since Great Schism
  • WEBINAR: The Path to the Priesthood
  • Interview with Justine Alter

RSS Good Guys Wear Black

  • The Good Priest
  • WEBINAR: The Path to the Priesthood
  • The Necessity of Speaking Out for the Faith
  • The Melody of Faith: Singing the Creed in Orthodox Liturgy
  • How to Know that You are Called to be a Priest – 5 Minutes With A Priest

A Directory of Arizona Orthodox Churches

Find what you’re looking for

Weekly Bulletin for Sunday, May 18, 2025

Orthodox Calendar



Copyright © 2025 All Saints of North America Orthodox Church · All Rights Reserved
Designed by Fr. John A. Peck · Log in