Metr. Saba Explores the Spiritual Depth of the Orthodox Liturgy
Metr. Saba teaches that the Orthodox liturgy brings believers into a living encounter with Christ’s saving work and the communion of the saints.
ENGLEWOOD, NJ — Metr. Saba (Isper) has continued his reflections on the meaning of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy, emphasizing that worship lifts the Church into the reality of heaven and transforms believers into witnesses of the Kingdom in the midst of a troubled world.
According to the Antiochian hierarch, Orthodox liturgical texts consistently begin by addressing God and recalling His saving work for humanity. Throughout the Church year, services proclaim the central mystery of salvation accomplished by Christ through His Incarnation, Death, and Resurrection—events repeatedly remembered in the liturgy as having occurred “for our salvation.” These commemorations appear in the feasts of the Nativity, Theophany, Transfiguration, Pascha, and Pentecost.
Metr. Saba explained that the liturgical calendar unfolds the entire economy of salvation, guiding the faithful from feast to feast. Through hymns, Scripture readings, icons, processions, and the Eucharist, believers do not merely recall sacred events but participate in them in the present moment.
The hierarch stressed that the liturgy preserves Orthodox doctrine by continually proclaiming Christ’s divine and human natures and the revelation of the Holy Trinity. At the same time, the Church’s worship fosters communion with the saints, whose lives and hymns fill the liturgical books such as the Menaion and inspire believers to follow Christ faithfully.
Previously, the UOJ reported that Metr. Saba marked Antiochian Women Month 2026.