Tea with a hippopotamus on the resurrection of the dead. "I have tea for the resurrection of the dead

  • 29.09.2019

The eleventh and twelfth parts of the Creed speak of the general resurrection of the dead, which should take place simultaneously with the second and glorious coming to earth of the Lord Jesus Christ, and of the life of the future age that will come after that.

I look forward to the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the age to come.
Since its inception, Christianity has believed and hoped that someday all the dead will come to life and be resurrected in their bodies. Man was created by God as a being, consisting of body and soul. Christ came to earth to save not only the soul, but also the body of man.

First, angels, spiritual beings, were created, then the rest of the world, plants and animals. Man is the first and only creation in which both spiritual and material principles are present. According to Christian teaching, the soul of animals is not like the human soul, it is mortal and is destroyed along with the body. The spirit of a person makes him related to God, and the body - to the animal world.

This, according to Christian theology, is the reason for the dependence of the fate of the world on the fate of man. When a person falls into sin, his whole being is upset. The soul is affected by sinful passions, the body becomes corruptible and mortal. According to the unity of nature, the world around him is also distorted. This means that the state of the world directly depends on the moral state of a person. The Apostle Paul says that the whole creation is now groaning and tormented, waiting for the revelation of the sons of men.

The doctrine of duality human nature means that a person's existence is complete when his soul and body are inseparable. When they are separated in death, the person ceases to be what God intended him to be. The death of a person was not included in the plans of the Creator. Turning away from God, people doomed themselves to destruction.

The separation of soul and body is not eternal. According to the faith of the Christian Church, the second glorious coming of Jesus Christ will be accompanied by the resurrection of all the dead and the transfiguration of the living. People will rise in their bodies, but incorruptible and immortal. Their body will become like the body of the resurrected Lord. Man will gain what he was created for - immortality and eternal life. That for which the Son of God was incarnated, endured severe suffering and died on the Cross.

The life of the future age for some will be filled with happiness and bliss from contemplating the Lord and being in love with Him and with other people who have been honored with the same fate. For others, it will mean eternal torment and a stay in hell.

Hell is a place where there is no God. Hellish torment in the Christian tradition is most often conveyed in the images of eternal, unquenchable fire, to which those who reject God will betray themselves.

According to one of the fathers of the Church, St. Gregory of Nyssa, the torment of hell will be the action of grace, which, penetrating the righteous, will bring him bliss, and for the apostate it will be like a painful, devouring fire, because it is said that Light will destroy darkness.

The Creed, the treasury of the divinely revealed truth of the Christian Church, ends with hope for the life of the future age. His expressions are concise and laconic, but what is behind this seeming simplicity! He reveals to us the knowledge of what is incomprehensible to the mind and hidden to the eyes - the knowledge of God.

We have already talked about how important a place in Christian teaching is eschatology, the appeal to the "end" of the world. To forget about this means to deliberately distort the gospel message, it means to reduce Revelation to some kind of conformist ethics. Whereas for Hellenic philosophy, due to its inherent cyclical concept of time, the resurrection of the dead was nonsense, the Christian doctrine, which recognized the linearity of time from the Bible, sees the justification of history in the resurrection of the dead. If we carefully consider the Platonic idea of ​​the immortality of the soul, we will see that it is very far from the Christian dogma about human life in the next century.

The creed is used in an extremely characteristic expression: " tea resurrection of the dead." In Greek, this is conveyed by a verb that has a double meaning. On the one hand, he expresses the subjective expectation of believers, an echo of which we find at the end of the Apocalypse: Hey, come, Lord Jesus(Rev. 22:20); on the other hand, it is an objective fact for the world: the resurrection of the dead will inevitably come to pass. The resurrection from the dead is not just a pious hope, it is an absolute certainty that conditions the faith of Christians. However, if this belief seemed strange to the Gentiles (Acts 17:32), then it was natural for most Jews (John 11:24). She is justified Old Testament. (e.g. Ezekiel 37:1-14). What was new in the Christian faith was that the blessed resurrection from the dead is connected with the redemptive work of Jesus Christ. I am the resurrection and the life- says the Lord to Martha, - whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live; and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die(John 2:25-26). That is why the apostle Paul writes to the Thessalonians: I do not want to leave you, brethren, in ignorance of the dead, so that you do not grieve like others who have no hope.(1 Thessalonians 4:13). Truly, the Christian teaching is a religion of hope, therefore the firmness of the martyrs has nothing in common with the calmness of the ancient sages before the inevitable end. And how touching in its pacified confidence is the prayer at the stake of the holy martyr Polycarp: “Lord God, the Almighty, Father of Jesus Christ, Your beloved and blessed Child, by Whom we have come to know You; God of Angels and Forces, God of all creation and the whole family of the righteous living in Your presence: I bless You that You have honored me this day and hour to be numbered among Your martyrs, and to drink from the cup of Your Christ in order to be resurrected into eternal life of soul and body in the incorruptibility of the Holy Spirit."

The Niceno-Tsaregrad Creed speaks of the "resurrection of the dead"; the ancient Roman Credo, in order to emphasize the literal meaning of this event, speaks of the "resurrection of the flesh." However, the term "flesh" must here be understood to mean "personality" because we know that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God(1 Corinthians 15:50). Sunday to eternal life presupposes change, the transition from perishable to incorruptible (ibid., verses: 51-54). The apostle Paul, after a series of discussions about how the resurrection will take place, clearly states: a spiritual body is sown, a spiritual body is raised(ibid., verse 44). Undoubtedly, the resurrected body and the buried body are one and the same subject, but the mode of their existence is different. In order to understand this, one should not lose sight of what the category of the spiritual, which is connected with the category of the Divine, means for the Apostle Paul. The spiritual body is a body transformed by grace: As in Adam all die, so in Christ all shall be made alive.(1 Corinthians 15:22), Christ is risen - firstborn of the dead(ibid. 20). The whole life of a Christian should be filled with this confidence, therefore believers should behave in this world as children of light(Eph. 5:8). Participation in the Holy Eucharist is a pledge of eternal life, which the liturgy often reminds us of. Indeed, it is in the Sacrament of the Eucharist that the eschatological moment is perhaps most emphasized. The Last Supper is the anticipation of the feast in the hall of the Kingdom, to which we are all called. The descent of the Holy Spirit on the Holy Gifts at the moment of the epiclesis brings Pentecost to the present and represents the victory of the Second Coming. The connection with Pentecost, on the one hand, with the Second Coming and the General Resurrection, on the other, is especially emphasized by Eastern liturgy. The Sabbath before Pentecost is first of all dedicated to the departed, and the kneeling prayer at the Sunday vespers of the feast of Pentecost contains a foreboding of the Common Resurrection: “We confess your grace in all in our entrances into this world, and in our departures, the hope of resurrection and incorruptible life. They are betrothed by your unfalse promise, as we will receive in your future Second Coming.

In the General Resurrection, which completes the history of this world, Christians see, first of all, the manifested victory of Christ, the true harbinger of which was the Resurrection of the Lord at the dawn of the third day. But the "Day of the Lord" will also be the day of judgment. We know that And those who have done good will go out to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment(John 5:29). This will be the final separation of the good seeds from the chaff. No one else but the Lord Himself must make this separation, and it will be done only at the last Judgment. Then there will be no more mixing of good and evil, for nothing unclean will enter the Kingdom and no change in human destinies will be possible anymore. On the other side of time, only that which cannot be changed will remain. Judgment is separation from God forever. According to the Providence of God, the vocation of man is transfiguration, deification, union with God. In the "age to come" everything that is removed from God will be considered to be put to death. This will be the second death - the one about which the holy Apostle John the Theologian speaks in the book of Revelation (Rev. 20:14). This death signifies the oblivion of God. Those who did not want to know God will no longer be known by Him. Those who knew Him and served Him will shine with unspeakable and unfading glory.

The creed begins with the solemn affirmation of faith in God. This affirmation is not only an intellectual act, it presupposes the whole involvement of the soul and a reciprocal return. In Christ, through the Holy Spirit, the life of the believer is transformed, because a Christian, although he lives in “this world,” is not “of this world.” His gaze is turned to the Kingdom of Light, therefore the Creed ends with a joyful confession of the aspirations of the resurrection and the life of the future age, in which there will no longer be “neither sickness, nor sorrow, nor sighing.”

Inconsolable and boundless should have been our sorrow for our dying loved ones, if the Lord had not given us eternal life. Our life would be meaningless if it ended with death. What is the use then of virtue, of good deeds? Then those who say are right: “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we will die!” (1 Cor. 15:32). But man was created for immortality, and by His resurrection Christ opened the gates of the Kingdom of Heaven, eternal bliss, to those who believed in Him and lived righteously. Our earthly life is a preparation for the future, and that preparation ends with our death. “Man must die one day, then judgment” (Heb. 9:27). Then the person leaves all his earthly cares, the body disintegrates in order to rise again in the general resurrection. But his soul continues to live and never ceases to exist for a moment. By many appearances of the dead, it is given to us in part to know what happens to the soul when it leaves the body. When her vision with her bodily eyes ceases, then her spiritual vision opens. Often it begins in the dying even before death, and they, while still seeing those around them and even talking to them, see what others do not see. Having left the body, the soul finds itself among other spirits, good and evil. Usually she tends to those who are more akin in spirit, and if, while in the body, she was under the influence of some, then she remains dependent on them, leaving the body, no matter how unpleasant they may be upon meeting.

For two days, the soul enjoys relative freedom, can visit places on earth that it loves, and on the third day it goes to other spaces. At the same time, she passes through hordes of evil spirits that block her path and accuse her of various sins, to which they themselves tempted her. According to the revelations, there are twenty such barriers, the so-called ordeals, on each of them one or another type of sin is tested; having passed through one, the soul enters the next, and only having safely passed through all, the soul can continue its journey, and not be immediately cast into hell. How terrible those demons and their trials are shown by the fact that the Theotokos Herself, informed by the Archangel Gabriel of her impending death, prayed to Her Son to deliver Her from those demons, and, fulfilling Her prayer, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself appeared from Heaven to receive the soul of His Most Pure Mother and lift up to Heaven. The third day is terrible for the soul of the deceased, and therefore it then especially needs prayer for it. Having successfully passed the ordeals and bowed to God, the soul visits the Heavenly Villages and the abysses of hell for another thirty-seven days, not yet knowing where it will end up, and only on the fortieth day is its place determined until the resurrection of the dead. Some souls are in a state of anticipation of eternal joy and bliss, while others are in fear of eternal torment, which will fully come after Doomsday. Until then, changes in the state of souls are still possible, especially through an offering for them. Bloodless Sacrifice(commemoration at the liturgy), as well as other prayers.

How important is the commemoration at the liturgy, shows the following event. Before the opening of the relics of St. Theodosius of Chernigov (1896), the priest, who was reclothing the relics, tired, sitting near the relics, dozed off and saw the saint in front of him, who said to him: “Thank you for working for me. I also ask you, when you celebrate the Liturgy, remember my parents, ”and called their names (Priest Nikita and Maria). “How do you, saint, ask me for prayers when you yourself stand at the throne of heaven and give people the mercy of God ?!” the priest asked. “Yes, that’s true,” Saint Theodosius answered, “but the offering at the Liturgy is stronger than my prayer.”

Therefore, memorial services are useful for the dead, and home prayers for the dead, and good deeds done in their memory, such as almsgiving, sacrifices to the church, but commemoration for the dead is especially useful for them. Divine Liturgy. There were many appearances of the departed and other events confirming how beneficial the commemoration of the departed is. Many who died with repentance, but did not have time to show it during their lifetime, were freed from torment and received repose. Prayers are always offered in the church for the repose of the dead, and even on the day of the Descent of the Holy Spirit, there is a special prayer “for those who are held in hell” in kneeling prayers at Vespers. Each of us, wishing to show our love for the dead and provide them with real help, can best do this through prayer for them, especially by commemorating them at the liturgy, when the particles taken out for the living and the dead are immersed in the Blood of the Lord with the words: “Wash Lord, the sins of those who are remembered here by Your precious Blood, by the prayers of Your saints. We can do nothing better and more for the departed than to pray for them, offering commemoration for them at the liturgy. They always need this, and especially in those forty days in which the soul of the deceased makes its way to the Eternal Abodes. Then the body does not feel anything, does not see the gathered loved ones, does not smell the fragrance of flowers, does not hear funeral speeches. But the soul feels the prayers offered for it, is grateful to those who create them, and is spiritually close to them.

Relatives and friends of the deceased! Do for them what they need and what you can! Spend money not on the external decorations of the coffin and grave, but on helping those in need, in memory of deceased loved ones, on churches where prayers are offered for them. Show mercy to the deceased, take care of his soul. We all have that path ahead of us; how we will wish then that they would remember us in prayer! Let us ourselves be merciful to the departed. As soon as someone passes away, immediately call or notify the priest to read the "Following the Exodus of the Soul", which is supposed to be read over all Orthodox immediately after their death. Try to ensure that, if possible, the funeral service takes place in the church and the Psalter is read over the deceased before the funeral service. The funeral service can be performed not magnificently, but always completely, without reduction; then think not about yourself and your comforts, but about the deceased, whom you say goodbye forever. If there are several dead in the church at the same time, do not refuse to have them buried together. It is better to let two or more dead people be buried at once, and the prayer of all their loved ones gathered will be even hotter, than they will be buried in turn and, not having the strength and time, will shorten the service, when every word of prayer for the deceased is like a drop of water to the thirsty. Be sure to immediately take care of the magpie, that is, the daily commemoration for 40 days at the liturgy. Usually, in churches where daily worship takes place, the dead buried there are commemorated for forty days or more. If they are buried in a church where there is no daily service, relatives should take care of themselves and order a magpie where there is a daily service. It is also good to send for remembrance to monasteries and to Jerusalem, where there is constant prayer at holy places. But you need to start the magpie immediately after death, when the soul especially needs prayer help, and therefore start the commemoration in the nearest place where the daily service is.

Let us take care of those who go to the other world before us, so that we can do everything we can for them, remembering that “Blessed are mercy, for they shall have mercy” (Matt. 5:7).

Questions to the abbot / Faith in God

What does "I have tea for the resurrection of the dead" mean?

Why does the Creed say: “Tea resurrection of the dead”, and at the same time we believe that the soul does not die, does not “fall asleep” until the Last Judgment, but immediately goes through ordeals and goes to judgment? And we turn to the saints as to the living, and they help us. Explain to me, please, this question is very important. In particular, I need to know how to object to Adventists, because according to their faith, everyone “dies” before the Last Judgment, and there are no saints.

Dear Xenia, we say "tea" or "I hope" or "hope" for the resurrection of the dead - this does not mean that we assume that it may be, will be, or maybe not. But this means that we testify to our faith that during the Last Judgment there will be a union of soul and body. Now, when a person dies, there is a separation of his spiritual and bodily composition, the body remains in the earth, and the soul, passing through a private judgment, then is either in a state of closeness to God, and joy, and bliss, or in a state of condemnation, the latter, however, is not final and can be changed through the prayers of the Church. During the Last Judgment, the union of the soul and body will take place, and the final, already for eternity, determination of the fate of man, namely, in relation to this, it is said in the creed “tea of ​​the resurrection of the dead”, against those who deny this coming Last Judgment of God and ours there. a general phenomenon.

On the issue of Adventists: in order not to quote at length, dear Xenia, I will refer you to the relevant sections of Orthodox dogma that speak about this. For example, the book of Protopresbyter Mikhail Pomazansky "Dogmatic Theology", To the "Dogmatic Theology" of Metropolitan Macarius Bulgakov, to the book "The Law of God", published by the Sretensky Monastery, where this topic with quotations from them Holy Scripture, which is especially important for Adventists, and of the holy fathers is sufficiently sanctified.

How to understand the words from the prayer - "I have tea for the resurrection of the dead and the life of the age to come"?

In the Holy Spirit, in one holy Christian Church, in general

for the remission of sins, for the resurrection of the flesh, and for life

6 What does this mean? I believe I can't on my own

or to believe with my own strength in Jesus Christ, my

Lord, or come to Him. But the Holy Spirit called me through

Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts, sanctified and preserved my

I am not in true faith. Just as He calls, gathers, enlightens

and sanctifies the entire Christian Church on earth and preserves it with

Jesus Christ, in the one true faith. And in this Christian

Church He daily generously forgives all sins to me and to all who believe -

and on the last day He will raise me and all the dead and give

gives me and all who believe in Christ eternal life.

This is the undeniable truth.

Not for torment created Love

We have to take care of ourselves

And the afterlife is already preparing

To expect in a broad sense means to foresee (see, feel, feel)

These words from the prayer were written on the banners of the Cossacks and anarchists of the times civil war. They expressed contempt for death and faith in new generations.

I look forward to the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the age to come. Amen

We have already talked about how important a place in Christian teaching is eschatology, the appeal to the "end" of the world. To forget about this means to deliberately distort the gospel message, it means to reduce Revelation to some kind of conformist ethics. Whereas for Hellenic philosophy, due to its inherent cyclical concept of time, the resurrection of the dead was nonsense, the Christian doctrine, which recognized the linearity of time from the Bible, sees the justification of history in the resurrection of the dead. If we carefully consider the Platonic idea of ​​the immortality of the soul, we will see that it is very far from the Christian dogma about human life in the next century.

The creed is used in an extremely characteristic expression: " tea resurrection of the dead." In Greek, this is conveyed by a verb that has a double meaning. On the one hand, he expresses the subjective expectation of believers, an echo of which we find at the end of the Apocalypse: Hey, come, Lord Jesus(Rev. 22:20); on the other hand, it is an objective fact for the world: the resurrection of the dead will inevitably come to pass. The resurrection from the dead is not just a pious hope, it is an absolute certainty that conditions the faith of Christians. However, if this belief seemed strange to the Gentiles (Acts 17:32), then it was natural for most Jews (John 11:24). It is substantiated by the Old Testament. (e.g. Ezekiel 37:1-14). What was new in the Christian faith was that the blessed resurrection from the dead is connected with the redemptive work of Jesus Christ. I am the resurrection and the life says the Lord to Martha, whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live; and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die(John 2:25-26). That is why the apostle Paul writes to the Thessalonians: I do not want to leave you, brethren, in ignorance of the dead, so that you do not grieve like others who have no hope.(1 Thessalonians 4:13). Truly, the Christian teaching is a religion of hope, therefore the firmness of the martyrs has nothing in common with the calmness of the ancient sages before the inevitable end. And how touching in its pacified confidence is the prayer at the stake of the holy martyr Polycarp: “Lord God, the Almighty, Father of Jesus Christ, Your beloved and blessed Child, by Whom we have come to know You; God of Angels and Forces, God of all creation and the whole family of the righteous living in Your presence: I bless You that You have honored me this day and hour to be numbered among Your martyrs, and to drink from the cup of Your Christ in order to be resurrected into eternal life of soul and body in the incorruptibility of the Holy Spirit."

The Niceno-Tsaregrad Creed speaks of the "resurrection of the dead"; the ancient Roman Credo, in order to emphasize the literal meaning of this event, speaks of the "resurrection of the flesh." However, the term "flesh" must here be understood to mean "personality" because we know that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God(1 Corinthians 15:50). Resurrection to eternal life presupposes a change, a transition from perishable to incorruptible (ibid., verses: 51-54). The apostle Paul, after a series of discussions about how the resurrection will take place, clearly states: a spiritual body is sown, a spiritual body is raised(ibid., verse 44). Undoubtedly, the resurrected body and the buried body are one and the same subject, but the mode of their existence is different. In order to understand this, one should not lose sight of what the category of the spiritual, which is connected with the category of the Divine, means for the Apostle Paul. The spiritual body is a body transformed by grace: As in Adam all die, so in Christ all shall be made alive.(1 Corinthians 15:22), Christ is risen - firstborn of the dead(ibid. 20). The whole life of a Christian should be filled with this confidence, therefore believers should behave in this world as children of light(Eph. 5:8). Participation in the Holy Eucharist is a pledge of eternal life, which the liturgy often reminds us of. Indeed, it is in the Sacrament of the Eucharist that the eschatological moment is perhaps most emphasized. The Last Supper is the anticipation of the feast in the hall of the Kingdom, to which we are all called. The descent of the Holy Spirit on the Holy Gifts at the moment of the epiclesis brings Pentecost to the present and represents the victory of the Second Coming. The connection with Pentecost, on the one hand, with the Second Coming and the General Resurrection, on the other, is especially emphasized by Eastern liturgy. The Sabbath before Pentecost is first of all dedicated to the departed, and the kneeling prayer at the Sunday vespers of the feast of Pentecost contains a foreboding of the Common Resurrection: “We confess your grace in all in our entrances into this world, and in our departures, the hope of resurrection and incorruptible life. They are betrothed by your unfalse promise, as we will receive in your future Second Coming.

In the General Resurrection, which completes the history of this world, Christians see, first of all, the manifested victory of Christ, the true harbinger of which was the Resurrection of the Lord at the dawn of the third day. But the "Day of the Lord" will also be the day of judgment. We know that And those who have done good will go out to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of judgment(John 5:29). This will be the final separation of the good seeds from the chaff. No one else but the Lord Himself must make this separation, and it will be done only at the last Judgment. Then there will be no more mixing of good and evil, for nothing unclean will enter the Kingdom and no change in human destinies will be possible anymore. On the other side of time, only that which cannot be changed will remain. Judgment is separation from God forever. According to the Providence of God, the vocation of man is transfiguration, deification, union with God. In the "age to come" everything that is removed from God will be considered to be put to death. This will be the second death - the one about which the holy Apostle John the Theologian speaks in the book of Revelation (Rev. 20:14). This death signifies the oblivion of God. Those who did not want to know God will no longer be known by Him. Those who knew Him and served Him will shine with unspeakable and unfading glory.

The creed begins with the solemn affirmation of faith in God. This affirmation is not only an intellectual act, it presupposes the whole involvement of the soul and a reciprocal return. In Christ, through the Holy Spirit, the life of the believer is transformed, because a Christian, although he lives in “this world,” is not “of this world.” His gaze is turned to the Kingdom of Light, therefore the Creed ends with a joyful confession of the aspirations of the resurrection and the life of the future age, in which there will no longer be “neither sickness, nor sorrow, nor sighing.”

Conversations about the Last Judgment

Discourse on the Last Judgment

Today is a week about the Last Judgment, and it is natural for us to talk about the Last Judgment and the signs of the end of the world. Nobody knows that day, only God the Father knows, but signs of its approach are given both in the Gospel and in the Revelation of St. app. John the Evangelist. Revelation speaks of the events of the end of the world and of the Last Judgment primarily in images and secretly, but St. the fathers explained it, and there is a genuine church tradition, which tells us both about the signs of the approaching end of the world, and about the Last Judgment.

Before the end of earthly life, there will be confusion, wars, civil strife, famine, earthquakes.

People will suffer from fear, they will die from the expectation of disasters. There will be no life, no joy of life, but a painful state of falling away from life. But there will be a falling away not only from life, but also from faith, and when the Son of Man comes, will he find faith on earth?

People will become proud, ungrateful, denying the Divine Law: along with falling away from life there will be an impoverishment of moral life. There will be a depletion of good and an increase in evil.

It is about this time that St. app. John the Theologian in his God-inspired creation called Revelation. He himself says that he "was in the Spirit," which means that the Holy Spirit Himself is in him, when the destinies of the Church and the world were revealed to him in various forms, and therefore, that is, God's Revelation.

He represents the fate of the Church in the image of a woman who was hiding in the desert in those days: she does not appear in life, as she does now in Russia.

In life, those forces that are preparing the appearance of the Antichrist will have a guiding significance. Antichrist will be a man, not an incarnate devil. "Anti" is a word meaning "old", or it means "instead of" or "against". That person wants to be in place of Christ, take His place and have what Christ should have had. He wants to have the same charm and power over the whole world.

And he will receive that power before the death of his own and the whole world. He will have an assistant Mage who, by the power of false miracles, will fulfill his will and kill those who do not recognize the power of the Antichrist. Before the death of the Antichrist, two righteous men will appear who will denounce him. The magician will kill them, and for three days their bodies will lie unburied, and there will be the utmost rejoicing of Antichrist and all his servants, and suddenly those righteous will be resurrected, and all the army of Antichrist will be in confusion, horror, and Antichrist himself will suddenly fall dead, killed by the power of the Spirit.

But what is known about the man-Antichrist? Its exact origin is unknown. The father is completely unknown, and the mother is a faithful imaginary girl. He will be a Jew from the tribe of Dan. That indication is that Jacob, dying, said that he, in his offspring, "is a serpent on the way, which will strike the horse, and then the rider will fall on his back." This is a figurative indication that he will act with cunning and evil.

John the Theologian in Revelation speaks of the salvation of the sons of Israel, that before the end of the world many Jews will turn to Christ, but there is no tribe of Dan in the list of saved tribes. The Antichrist will be very intelligent and gifted with the ability to deal with people. He will be charming and affectionate. Philosopher Vladimir Solovyov worked hard to present the coming and personality of the Antichrist. He carefully used all the materials on this issue, not only patristic, but also Muslim, and developed such a vivid picture.

Before the coming of the Antichrist, his appearance is already being prepared in the world. "The secret is already at work," and the forces preparing its appearance are first of all fighting against the legitimate royal power. St. app. John says that "the Antichrist cannot appear until the Restrainer is removed." John Chrysostom explains that "holding back" is a legitimate pious authority.

Such power fights evil. The “mystery” operating in the world does not want that, does not want to fight evil with the power of power: on the contrary, it wants the power of lawlessness, and when it achieves this, then nothing will prevent the appearance of the Antichrist. He will not only be smart and charming: he will be compassionate, will do mercy and goodness in order to strengthen his power. And when he strengthens it so that the whole world recognizes him, then he will reveal his face.

He will choose Jerusalem as his capital, because it was here that the Savior and His Personality revealed the Divine teaching, and the whole world was called to the bliss of goodness and salvation. But the world did not accept Christ and crucified Him in Jerusalem, and under the Antichrist, Jerusalem will become the capital of the world, recognizing the power of the Antichrist.

Having reached the pinnacle of power, the Antichrist will demand recognition from people that he has achieved what no one earthly power and no one could achieve, and will require worship of himself, as a higher being, as a god.

V. Solovyov describes well the nature of his activities as the Supreme Ruler. He will make everyone happy, provided that he is recognized as the Supreme Authority. He will provide an opportunity for the life of the Church, will allow her worship, promise the construction of beautiful temples, provided that he is recognized as the “Supreme Being” and worshiped. He will have a personal hatred for Christ. He will live this hatred and rejoice in the apostasy of people from Christ and the Church. There will be a mass falling away from the faith, and many bishops will betray the faith and, in justification, will point to the brilliant position of the Church.

The search for a compromise will be a characteristic mood of people. Straightforward confession will disappear. People will subtly justify their fall, and gentle evil will maintain such a general mood, and people will have the habit of apostasy from the truth and the sweetness of compromise and sin.

The Antichrist will allow everything to people, if only they "fallen bow to him." This is not a new attitude towards people: the Roman emperors were also ready to give freedom to Christians, if only they recognized their divinity and divine sovereignty, and they tortured Christians only because they confessed "God alone worship and serve Him alone."

The whole world will submit to him, and then he will reveal the face of his hatred for Christ and Christianity. St. John the Theologian says that all those who bow to him will have a sign on their foreheads and on their right hands. It is not known whether this will really be a mark on the body, or whether this is a figurative expression of the fact that people will recognize the need to worship the Antichrist and their will will be completely subordinated to him. During such a complete - will and consciousness - subjugation of the whole world, the aforementioned two righteous will appear and fearlessly preach the faith and denounce the Antichrist.

Holy Scripture says that before the coming of the Savior, two "lamps", two "burning olive trees", "two righteous men" will appear. They will be killed by the Antichrist with the powers of the Magician. Who are these righteous? According to church tradition, there are two righteous people who did not taste death: the prophet Elijah and the prophet Enoch. There is a prophecy that these righteous people who have not tasted death will taste it for three days, and after three days they will rise again.

Their death will be the great joy of the Antichrist and his servants. Their uprising in three days will lead them into unspeakable horror, fear, confusion. That's when the end of the world will come.

The Apostle Peter says that the first world was created from water and perished by water. “From the water” is also an image of the chaos of the physical mass, and perished - by the water of the flood. "And now the world is preserved for fire." "The earth and all the works on it will burn." All elements will ignite. This present world will perish in an instant. In a moment, everything will change.

And the sign of the Son of God will appear - that is, the sign of the cross. The whole world, voluntarily submitting to the Antichrist, will “cry”. Its end. The Antichrist is killed. The end of his kingdom, the struggle with Christ. The end and responsibility for all life, the answer to the True God.

Then the Ark of the Covenant will appear from the Palestinian mountains - the prophet Jeremiah hid the ark and the Holy Fire in a deep well. When water was taken from that well, it blazed. But the Ark itself was not found.

When we now look at life, those who are able to see see that everything prophesied about the end of the world is being fulfilled.

Who is this Antichrist? St. John the Theologian figuratively gives his name 666, but all attempts to understand this designation were in vain.

A life modern world gives us a fairly clear idea of ​​the possibility of burning the world when "all the elements are kindled." That concept gives us the decomposition of the atom.

The end of the world does not mean its destruction, but its change. Everything will change suddenly, in the blink of an eye. The dead will be resurrected in new bodies - their own, but renewed, as the Savior resurrected in His Body, it had traces of wounds from nails and a spear, but it had new properties and in this sense was a new body.

It is not clear whether this will be a completely new body, or the way a person was created.

And the Lord will appear with glory in the cloud. How will we see? Spiritual vision. And now, at death, righteous people see what other people around do not see.

The trumpets will sound powerfully and loudly. They will sound in the souls and consciences. Everything will become clear in the human conscience.

The Prophet Daniel, speaking of the Last Judgment, tells that the Elder Judge is on the throne, and in front of him is a fiery river. Fire is a purifying element. Fire consumes sin, burns it, and woe, if sin is innate to man himself, then he burns the man himself.

That fire will kindle inside a person: seeing the Cross, some will rejoice, while others will come to despair, confusion, horror. So people will immediately be divided: in the gospel narrative before the Judge, some stand to the right, others to the left - they are divided by their inner consciousness.

The very state of a person's soul throws him in one direction or another, to the right or to the left. The more consciously and persistently a person aspired to God in his life, the greater his joy will be when he hears the word “come to Me, blessed ones,” and vice versa, the same words will cause a fire of horror and torment in those who did not want Him, avoided or fought and blasphemed during his lifetime.

The court does not know the witnesses or the record. Everything is recorded in human souls, and these records, these "books" are revealed. Everything becomes clear to everyone and to oneself, and the state of a person's soul determines him to the right or to the left. Some go in joy, others in horror.

When the “books” are opened, it will become clear to everyone that the roots of all vices are in the human soul. Here is a drunkard, a fornicator - when the body died, someone will think that sin also died. No, there was an inclination in the soul, and sin was sweet to the soul.

And if she has not repented of that sin, has not been freed from it, she will come to the Last Judgment with the same desire for the sweetness of sin and will never satisfy her desire. In it will be the suffering of hatred and malice. This is a hellish state.

“Fiery Gehenna” is an internal fire, it is a flame of vice, a flame of weakness and anger, and “there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth” of impotent malice.

Will human bones come to life?

There was no limit to the sorrow and despondency of the ancient Jews when Jerusalem was destroyed and they themselves were led into Babylonian slavery. “Where is the essence of Your mercy of old, Lord, in the image you swore to David” (Ps. 89, 5), they cried. “Now you have rejected and put us to shame. who hates us plunders himself. and thou hast scattered us by the tongue” (Ps. 43:10-15). But when there seemed to be no hope of salvation, the prophet Ezekiel, who was also in captivity, was rewarded with a wondrous vision. “Be on me the hand of the Lord,” he says about that. The invisible Hand of the Lord placed him in the middle of a field full of human bones. And the Lord asked him: “Son of man, will these bones live?” “Lord God, You are all this,” the prophet answers. Then the voice of the Lord commanded the prophet to tell the bones that the Lord would give them the spirit of life, clothing them with veins, flesh, and skin. The prophet spoke the word of the Lord, a voice was heard, the earth shook, and the bones began to copulate, bone to bone, each to its own composition, veins appeared on them, flesh grew and covered with skin, so that the whole field became full of human bodies, only there was no soul in them. Again the prophet hears the Lord and, at His command, prophesies the word of the Lord, and souls flock from the four countries, the spirit of life enters the bodies, they rise, and the field is filled with a gathering of many people.

And the Lord said: “Son of man, these are the bones of the whole house of Israel. they say - perish our hope, kill us with a blast. Behold, I will open your tombs and bring you out of your tombs, my people, and I will put My Spirit in you, and you will live, and I will set you on your land.

Thus the Lord God revealed to Ezekiel that His promises are unshakable and that what seems impossible to the human mind is accomplished by the power of God.

That vision meant that Israel, having been freed from captivity, would return to their land, but in the highest sense it indicated the infusion of spiritual Israel into the eternal heavenly Kingdom of Christ. At the same time, the coming general resurrection of all the dead was foreshadowed here.

Therefore this prophecy of Ezekiel is read at Matins Great Saturday when, by his death, Christ, having broken the gates of death, opens the tombs of all the dead.

Faith in the resurrection is the cornerstone of our faith. “If there is no resurrection, then Christ has not risen; and if Christ is not risen, our faith is also in vain” (1 Cor. 15:13-14). If there is no resurrection, the whole Christian teaching is false. That is why the enemies of Christianity fight so hard against faith in the resurrection, and why the Church of Christ affirms faith in the resurrection in the same way. More than once, waves of unbelief rose high, but rolled back before new signs that showed the reality of the resurrection, the quickening of God recognized as dead.

In the 5th century, during the reign of Emperor Theodosius the Younger, doubts about the resurrection of the dead began to spread strongly, so that even the churches were arguing about it. And just at that time a wonderful event occurred, the reliability of which is confirmed by a number of historical records.

Back in the middle of the 3rd century, during the reign of Emperor Decius (249-251), by his order, seven youths were covered with stones in a cave near the city of Ephesus. The son of the mayor of Ephesus, Maximilian, and his six friends - Iamblichus, Dionysius, John, Antoninus, Martinian and Eksakustodian confessed themselves Christians and refused to sacrifice to idols. Taking advantage of the time given to them for reflection and the temporary departure of the emperor, they left Ephesus and hid in one of the caves in the surrounding mountains. When Decius returned, having learned about that, he ordered to fill the entrance to the cave with stones so that the youths, deprived of food and air flow, would be buried alive there. When Decius' order was fulfilled, two secret Christians, Theodore and Rufinus, wrote down the event on tin boards, which they hid between the stones at the entrance to the cave.

The youths who were in the cave, however, did not know what had happened. On the eve, having learned about the arrival in the city of Decius and praying fervently to God, they fell into a strong, unusual sleep, which lasted about 172 years. They woke up only in the reign of Theodosius the Younger, just when there were disputes about the resurrection. At that time, the then owner of that place dismantled the stones blocking the entrance to the cave and used them for construction, completely unaware that there were children in the cave, whom everyone had long forgotten about. The youths who woke up thought that they slept for one night, because they did not notice any changes in the cave and they themselves did not change at all. One of them, the youngest, Iamblichus, who used to go to the city for food, having prayed with friends to God, also went to Ephesus to find out if they were looking for them and to buy food for himself. He was amazed at the change, seeing churches that did not exist yesterday, as it seemed to him, and hearing the pronounced name of Christ. Thinking that he had mistakenly ended up in another city, he nevertheless decided to buy bread here, but when he gave a coin for this bread, the grain merchant began to examine it intently and asked where he found the treasure. In vain Iamblichus assured that he did not find the treasure and that he received money from his parents, people began to flock and seek where he found the old money. Iamblichus named the names of his parents and friends, no one knew them, and finally Iamblichus heard from the audience that he really was in Ephesus, but the emperor was long gone, the Christ-loving Theodosius reigned.

The mayor and the bishop heard about the incident, and to verify the words of Iamblichus, they went with him to the cave, found six other youths, and at the entrance to the cave they found tin boards and learned from them when and how the youths ended up in the cave. The governor immediately informed the king about all this, who personally arrived in Ephesus and talked with the youths. During one of the conversations, they bowed their heads and fell asleep in eternal sleep. The king wanted to transfer them to the capital, but the youths who appeared to him in a dream ordered him to bury them in a cave, where they had been sleeping in a wonderful dream for many years. This was done, and for many centuries their relics rested in that cave - the 12th-century Russian pilgrim Anthony describes how he worshiped them.

That miraculous awakening of the youths was then accepted as a prototype and confirmation of the resurrection. Everywhere the news spread that several contemporaries-historians mention that, it was said about that at the soon-to-be-in that city III Ecumenical Council. That amazing miracle then strengthened faith in the resurrection. The power of God was clearly manifested, preserving for many years the bodies and garments of the youths incorruptible. Just as the Lord raised them up from sleep, so He will gather the bones and raise up the dead, according to the vision of the prophet Ezekiel.

That prophecy, which foreshadows not only the resurrection of the dead, but also the preservation of the people who keep God's law from death, was also clearly fulfilled over the Russian land.

At the beginning of the 17th century, after the cessation of the reigning family, hard times came in Russia. The Russian land was left without power, was torn apart by internal turmoil, was attacked by the surrounding peoples, who captured many Russian regions and even the heart of Russia - Moscow. The Russian people fainted, they lost hope that there would be Russian Kingdom, many sought favors from foreign sovereigns, others molested various impostors and thieves posing as princes.

When it seemed that Russia no longer existed, only a few still hoped for its salvation, the last call of Patriarch Hermogenes, who had died there, was heard from the dungeon of the Chudov Monastery. His letter with a message from the Archimandrite of the Trinity-Sergius Monastery Dionysius and the cellarer Avraamy Palitsin reached Nizhny Novgorod. In it, the Russian people were called upon to stand up for the shrines of Moscow and the House Mother of God.

The letter stirred the hearts, and citizen Kosma Minin from the porch of the cathedral turned to fellow citizens with a fiery appeal to give everything for the Fatherland. Donations immediately poured in, the militia began to gather. At its head, the valiant governor, Prince Dimitri Mikhailovich Pozharsky, who had barely recovered from his wounds, was called to become. But, realizing the weakness of human forces, the Russian people gave themselves under the protection of the Chosen Voivode and, as the greatest treasure, they took that miraculous icon The Mother of God, whom the holy Patriarch Hermogenes once raised from the earth, while still presbyter Ermolai.

The Russian militia set off, trusting not in their own weak strength, but in the almighty help of God. And indeed, something has been done that no effort has been able to do until now. Moscow was liberated in a short time, and on this day of memory of the seven youths of Ephesus, the Russian militia entered the Kremlin in a solemn procession, from where another procession, with Vladimir Icon Mother of God, who remained in the captive city.

The Russian land was cleared of enemies and impostors, the Russian Kingdom was restored, on the throne of which the young Mikhail Feodorovich Romanov ascended. Russia resurrected, her wounds healed, and she went from glory to glory. The Kazan image of the Mother of God, with which Moscow was liberated and with it the whole Russian land, became the greatest shrine of the entire Russian people. His lists, placed in the capital city of Moscow, and then in the new royal city of St. Peter, were also famous for many miracles. Kazan icons of the Mother of God were in every city, village and almost every house, and the feast of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God was celebrated throughout Russia as a great holiday.

again the Russian Land is shaken to its foundations, the waves of unbelief are rising high. Sorrow seizes the hearts, and in misfortunes the Russian people, like the captive Israelites, are ready to cry out: "Our bones are dry, hope perishes, kill them." But the memory of the seven youths who have risen from sleep with the meeting of the Kazan Icon of the Mother of God speak of the almighty right hand of God, and the verb of the prophet Ezekiel from the depths of centuries thunders with the voice of the Lord: on your land and tell you that I am the Lord: I will say and I will create, says the Lord Adonai! (Ezek. 37:12-14).

I tea the resurrection of the dead and the life of the age to come

Inconsolable and boundless should have been our sorrow for our dying loved ones, if the Lord had not given us eternal life. Our life would be meaningless if it ended with death. What is the use then of virtue, of good deeds? Then those who say “let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die!” are right! But man was created for immortality, and by His Resurrection Christ opened the gates of the Kingdom of Heaven, eternal bliss, to those who believed in Him and lived righteously. Our earthly life is a preparation for the future, and that preparation ends with our death. "A man must die one day, then the judgment." Then a person leaves all his earthly cares, the body disintegrates in order to rise again in the general resurrection. But his soul continues to live and never ceases to exist for a moment. By many appearances of the dead, it is given to us in part to know what happens to the soul when it leaves the body. When her vision with her bodily eyes ceases, then her spiritual vision opens. Often it begins in the dying even before death, and they, while still seeing those around them and even talking to them, see what others do not see. Having left the body, the soul finds itself among other spirits, good and evil. Usually she tends to those who are more akin in spirit, and if, while in the body, she was under the influence of some, then she remains dependent on them, leaving the body, no matter how unpleasant they may be upon meeting.

For two days, the soul enjoys relative freedom, can visit places on earth that it loves, and on the third day it goes to other spaces. At the same time, she passes through hordes of evil spirits that block her path and accuse her of various sins, to which they themselves tempted her. According to the revelations, there are twenty such barriers, the so-called ordeals, on each of them one or another type of sin is tested; having passed through one, the soul enters the next, and only having safely passed through all, the soul can continue its journey, and not be immediately cast into hell. How terrible those demons and their trials are shown by the fact that the Theotokos Herself, informed by the archangel Gabriel of her impending death, prayed to Her Son to deliver Her from those demons, and, fulfilling Her prayer, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself appeared from Heaven to receive the soul of His Most Pure Mother and lift up to heaven. The third day is terrible for the soul of the deceased, and therefore it then especially needs prayer for it. Having successfully passed the ordeals and worshiped God, the soul visits heavenly villages and hellish abysses for another thirty-seven days, not yet knowing where it will end up, and only on the fortieth day is its place determined until the Resurrection of the dead. Some souls are in anticipation of eternal joy and bliss, while others are in fear of eternal torment, which will fully come after the Last Judgment. Until then, changes in the state of souls are still possible, especially through the offering of the Bloodless Sacrifice for them (commemoration at the liturgy), as well as through other prayers. How important the commemoration at the liturgy is in this case is shown by the following event. Before the opening of the relics of St. Theodosius of Chernigov (1896), the priest who was reclothing the relics, tired, sitting near the relics, dozed off and saw the saint in front of him, who said to him: “Thank you for working for me. I also ask you, when you celebrate the Liturgy, remember my parents, ”and called their names (Priest Nikita and Maria). “How do you, saint, ask me for prayers when you yourself stand at the throne of heaven and give people the mercy of God?” the priest asked. “Yes, that’s right,” said St. Theodosius, but the offering at the liturgy is stronger than my prayer.”

Therefore, memorial services, and home prayers for the departed, and good deeds done in their memory, such as, for example, almsgiving, sacrifices for the church, are useful for the dead, but commemoration at the Divine Liturgy is especially useful for them. There were many appearances of the departed and other events confirming how beneficial the commemoration of the departed is. Many who died with repentance, but did not have time to show it during their lifetime, were freed from torment and received repose. In the church, prayers are always offered for the repose of the dead, and even on the day of the descent of the Holy Spirit in kneeling prayers, at Vespers, there is a special prayer "for a hedgehog in hell held." Each of us, wishing to show our love for the dead and provide them with real help, can best do this through prayer for them, especially by commemorating them at the liturgy, when the particles taken out for the living and the dead fall into the blood of the Lord with the words “Wash, Lord, the sins of those who were remembered here by Your precious Blood, by the prayers of Your saints. We can do nothing better and more for the departed than to pray for them, offering commemoration for them at the liturgy. They always need this, and especially in those forty days in which the soul of the deceased makes its way to the eternal abodes. Then the body does not feel anything, does not see the gathered relatives, does not smell the fragrance of flowers, does not hear funeral speeches. But the soul feels the prayers offered for it, is grateful to those who create them, and is spiritually close to them.

Relatives and friends of the deceased! Do for them what they need and what you can. Spend money not on the external decorations of the coffin, grave, but on helping those in need, in memory of deceased loved ones, on churches where prayers are offered for them. Show mercy to the deceased, take care of his soul. We all have that path ahead of us; how we will wish then that they would remember us in prayer! Let us ourselves be merciful to the departed. As soon as someone passes away, immediately call or notify the priest to read the "Following the Exodus of the Soul", which should be read over all Orthodox immediately after their death. Try to ensure that, if possible, the funeral service takes place in the church and the Psalter is read over the deceased before the funeral service. The funeral service can be performed not magnificently, but always completely, without reduction; think not about yourself and your comforts, but about the deceased, whom you say goodbye forever. If there are several dead in the church at the same time, do not refuse to have them buried together. Better than two or more dead, and even hotter will be the prayer of all their loved ones who have gathered, than they will bury them in turn and, not having the strength and time, will shorten the service, when every word of prayer for the deceased is like a drop of water to the thirsty. Be sure to immediately take care of the magpie, i.e. daily commemoration for 40 days at the liturgy. Usually, in churches where daily worship takes place, the dead buried there are commemorated for forty days or more. If they are buried in a church where there is no daily service, relatives should take care of themselves and order a magpie where there is a daily service. It is also good to send for remembrance to monasteries and to Jerusalem, where there is a constant service at holy places. But you need to start the magpie immediately after death, when the soul especially needs prayer help, and therefore start the commemoration in the nearest place where the daily service is.

Let us take care of those who go to another world before us, so that we can do everything for them that we can, remembering that "Blessed are the mercies, for they will have mercy."

How can we best honor our departed loved ones?

We often see the desire of the relatives of the deceased to carry out the funeral as richly as possible and arrange a grave. Large funds are sometimes spent on luxurious monuments.

Relatives and acquaintances spend a lot of money on wreaths and flowers, and the latter have to be taken out of the coffin even before it is closed, so that they do not accelerate the decomposition of the body.

Others want to express their respect for the deceased and their sympathy for his relatives through announcements through the press, although the very way of revealing their feelings shows their shallowness, and sometimes deceit, since a sincerely mourner will not flaunt his grief, but you can express your sympathy much warmer personally. .

But no matter what we make of all this, the deceased will not receive any benefit from it. It is the same for a dead body to lie in a poor or rich coffin, a luxurious or modest grave. It does not smell the flowers brought, it does not need feigned expressions of grief. The body is given over to decay, the soul lives, but no longer experiences the sensations perceived through the bodily organs. Another life has come for her, and another must be shown to her.

This is what we need to do if we really love the deceased and wish to bring our gifts to him! What exactly will bring joy to the soul of the deceased? First of all, sincere prayers for him, both personal and domestic prayers, and, in particular, church prayers, connected with the Bloodless Sacrifice, i.e. commemoration at the liturgy.

Many apparitions of the dead and other visions confirm the enormous benefit that the dead receive from prayer for them and from offering the Bloodless Sacrifice for them.

Another thing that brings great joy to the souls of the departed is the alms done for them. Feeding the hungry in the name of the deceased, helping the poor is the same as doing it himself.

The Monk Athanasia (Comm. 12 April) bequeathed before her death to feed the poor in memory of her for forty days; however, the sisters of the monastery, through negligence, performed this for only nine days.

Then the saint appeared to them with two angels and said: “Why did you forget my will? Know that the alms and prayers of the priests, offered for the soul for forty days, propitiate God: if the souls of the departed were sinners, then the Lord will grant them remission of sins; if they are righteous, then those who pray for them will be rewarded with good deeds.

Especially in our days, which are difficult for everyone, it is insane to spend money on useless objects and deeds, when, by using them for the poor, you can simultaneously do two good deeds: both for the deceased himself and for those who will be helped.

But if food is given to the poor with prayer for the deceased, they will be fed bodily, and the deceased will be fed spiritually.

Week 7 after Easter, 1941 Shanghai.

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Published by the Sretensky Monastery in 2006.

Inconsolable and boundless should have been our sorrow for our dying loved ones, if the Lord had not given us eternal life. Our life would be meaningless if it ended with death. What is the use then of virtue, of good deeds? Then those who say are right: “Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we will die!” (1 Cor. 15:32). But man was created for immortality, and by His resurrection Christ opened the gates of the Kingdom of Heaven, eternal bliss, to those who believed in Him and lived righteously. Our earthly life is a preparation for the future, and that preparation ends with our death. “Man must die one day, then judgment” (Heb. 9:27).

Then a person leaves all his earthly cares, the body disintegrates in order to rise again in the general resurrection. But his soul continues to live and never ceases to exist for a moment. By many appearances of the dead, it is given to us in part to know what happens to the soul when it leaves the body. When her vision with her bodily eyes ceases, then her spiritual vision opens. Often it begins in the dying even before death, and they, while still seeing those around them and even talking to them, see what others do not see. Having left the body, the soul finds itself among other spirits, good and evil. Usually she tends to those who are more akin in spirit, and if, while in the body, she was under the influence of some, then she remains dependent on them, leaving the body, no matter how unpleasant they may be upon meeting.

For two days, the soul enjoys relative freedom, can visit places on earth that it loves, and on the third day it goes to other spaces. At the same time, she passes through hordes of evil spirits that block her path and accuse her of various sins, to which they themselves tempted her. According to the revelations, there are twenty such barriers, the so-called ordeals, on each of them one or another type of sin is tested; having passed through one, the soul enters the next, and only having safely passed through all, the soul can continue its journey, and not be immediately cast into hell. How terrible those demons and their trials are shown by the fact that the Theotokos Herself, informed by the Archangel Gabriel of her impending death, prayed to Her Son to deliver Her from those demons, and, fulfilling Her prayer, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself appeared from Heaven to receive the soul of His Most Pure Mother and lift up to Heaven. The third day is terrible for the soul of the deceased, and therefore it then especially needs prayer for it. Having successfully passed the ordeals and bowed to God, the soul visits the Heavenly Villages and the abysses of hell for another thirty-seven days, not yet knowing where it will end up, and only on the fortieth day is its place determined until the resurrection of the dead. Some souls are in a state of anticipation of eternal joy and bliss, while others are in fear of eternal torment, which will fully come after the Last Judgment. Until then, changes in the state of souls are still possible, especially through the offering of the Bloodless Sacrifice for them (commemoration at the liturgy), as well as through other prayers.

How important is the commemoration at the liturgy, shows the following event. Before the opening of the relics of St. Theodosius of Chernigov (1896), the priest, who was reclothing the relics, tired, sitting near the relics, dozed off and saw the saint in front of him, who said to him: “Thank you for working for me. I also ask you, when you celebrate the Liturgy, remember my parents, ”and called their names (Priest Nikita and Maria). “How do you, saint, ask me for prayers when you yourself stand at the throne of heaven and give people the mercy of God ?!” the priest asked. “Yes, that’s true,” Saint Theodosius answered, “but the offering at the Liturgy is stronger than my prayer.”

Therefore, memorial services are useful for the dead, and prayers at home for the dead, and good deeds done in their memory, such as almsgiving, sacrifices for the church, but commemoration at the Divine Liturgy is especially useful for them. There were many appearances of the departed and other events confirming how beneficial the commemoration of the departed is. Many who died with repentance, but did not have time to show it during their lifetime, were freed from torment and received repose. Prayers are always offered in the church for the repose of the dead, and even on the day of the Descent of the Holy Spirit, there is a special prayer “for those who are held in hell” in kneeling prayers at Vespers. Each of us, wishing to show our love for the dead and provide them with real help, can best do this through prayer for them, especially by commemorating them at the liturgy, when the particles taken out for the living and the dead are immersed in the Blood of the Lord with the words: “Wash Lord, the sins of those who are remembered here by Your precious Blood, by the prayers of Your saints. We can do nothing better and more for the departed than to pray for them, offering commemoration for them at the liturgy. They always need this, and especially in those forty days in which the soul of the deceased makes its way to the Eternal Abodes. Then the body does not feel anything, does not see the gathered loved ones, does not smell the fragrance of flowers, does not hear funeral speeches. But the soul feels the prayers offered for it, is grateful to those who create them, and is spiritually close to them.

Relatives and friends of the deceased! Do for them what they need and what you can! Spend money not on the external decorations of the coffin and grave, but on helping those in need, in memory of deceased loved ones, on churches where prayers are offered for them. Show mercy to the deceased, take care of his soul. We all have that path ahead of us; how we will wish then that they would remember us in prayer! Let us ourselves be merciful to the departed. As soon as someone passes away, immediately call or notify the priest to read the "Following the Exodus of the Soul", which is supposed to be read over all Orthodox immediately after their death. Try to ensure that, if possible, the funeral service takes place in the church and the Psalter is read over the deceased before the funeral service. The funeral service can be performed not magnificently, but always completely, without reduction; then think not about yourself and your comforts, but about the deceased, whom you say goodbye forever. If there are several dead in the church at the same time, do not refuse to have them buried together. It is better to let two or more dead people be buried at once, and the prayer of all their loved ones gathered will be even hotter, than they will be buried in turn and, not having the strength and time, will shorten the service, when every word of prayer for the deceased is like a drop of water to the thirsty. Be sure to immediately take care of the magpie, that is, the daily commemoration for 40 days at the liturgy. Usually, in churches where daily worship takes place, the dead buried there are commemorated for forty days or more. If they are buried in a church where there is no daily service, relatives should take care of themselves and order a magpie where there is a daily service. It is also good to send for remembrance to monasteries and to Jerusalem, where there is constant prayer at holy places. But you need to start the magpie immediately after death, when the soul especially needs prayer help, and therefore start the commemoration in the nearest place where the daily service is.

Let us take care of those who go to the other world before us, so that we can do everything we can for them, remembering that “Blessed are mercy, for they shall have mercy” (Matt. 5:7).