Three important questions
Once there lived a king who sought wisdom. He was told that there was a hermit who knew answers to all questions. The king came to him to see a senile old man, digging a garden bed. The king dismounted and bowed to the old man.
– I came to get the answer to three questions: who is the most important person on earth, what is the most important thing in life, what day is most important of all.
The hermit did not say a word and continued to dig. The king got down to work to help the old man.
Suddenly he saw a man walking along the road, his face covered with blood. The king stopped him, said a word of comfort to him, brought some water from the creek, cleaned and dressed the wounds of the traveller. Then he took him to the shack of the hermit and put him to bed. In the morning he saw the hermit sowing the garden bed.
– Hermit, – begged the king. – Can’t you answer my questions?
– You yourself have answered them, – he said.
– How? – asked the king in amazement.
– Seeing my old age and infirmity, you took pity on me and offered to help, – said the hermit.
– While you were digging up the garden bed, I was the most important person for you, and helping me was the most important thing for you. Once appeared the wounded, his need turned out to be more urgent than mine. And he became the main man for you, and your help to him – the most important thing. So, the most important person is the one who needs your help. And the most important thing is the good that you are doing to him.
– Now I can answer my third question: what day in human’s life is more important than the rest, – said the king. – The most important day is today.
Read also
What Is the ‘Uncut Mountain’?
On March 24, the Orthodox Church commemorates the Icon of the Mother of God “the Uncut Mountain.” It’s a name familiar to many through businesses like Uncut Mountain Supply and Press. But what does it actually mean, and why is it so popular?
Ask a Priest: Can Women Preach?
Dear Father, Bless! As you know, we have not been Orthodox for very long. My family is so happy to be part of the parish! But we are a little confused. We saw a video of an Orthodox woman preaching. She was dressed in the black robe you wear at vigil and was wearing a cross. Are women permitted to preach in Orthodoxy? We saw this in our former Protestant parish all the time, but we never thought we’d see this in Orthodoxy. Please…is this right?! Kissing your right hand, J—
St. Benedict as Hesychast
St. Gregory Palamas himself, the great defender of hesychasm, spoke of the “many Latin saints” whose lives prove that divine energies can transfigure human flesh. No doubt he counted St. Benedict chief among them.
Educating at the Icon Corner: The Rise of Orthodox Homeschooling
Amid surging conversions transforming American Orthodoxy from an immigrant faith to one of evangelization, a parallel wave rises: Orthodox families increasingly embracing homeschooling to weave liturgy, traditional values, and faith-centered learning into daily life.
The Scandal of the Icon
The Seventh Ecumenical Council declares that proper Orthodox veneration of icons demands physical greeting—kissing and bowing—as inseparable from honoring the prototype, anathematizing those who refuse to kiss them.