Monday, October 18, 2021

Parishes of EP celebrating "Synaxis of the Holy Doctors"

(OMHKSEA) - On July 21, 2021, the Holy and Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, which was presided over by His All-Holiness, discussed and commended the self-sacrificing and vital dedication of those that serve in the area of Medicine and Health, especially during the present Pandemic.

Because of this, the Holy Synod decided to institute the “Feast of the Synaxis of the Holy Physicians”. The Feast will be celebrated every year on the Sunday that is nearest to that of the Feast of the Synaxis of the Holy Unmercenaries (October 17th) and that of St. Luke the Apostle, Evangelist and Doctor (October 18th). On the “Feast of the Synaxis of the Holy Doctors”, the Church will honor the contribution made by Medical Science and those that have dedicated their lives to the health and healing of mankind.

Patriarchal Encyclical For The Feast of The Holy Physicians

From ancient Christianity to modern times, doctors, nurses, and specialist healers, as well as other simple and conscientious faithful Christians have served “those in illness and suffering” by tangibly expressing God’s love for mankind, after the example and in the image of Christ.

A number of these were distinguished for their holiness, which the Church has recognized by officially canonizing them and including them to its Calendar of Saints. Many of them were physicians, while several others founded hospitals and philanthropic institutions, ministering the sick with humble dedication and meekness. Not only did they have excellent medical knowledge and skills, but they were additionally imbued by the sacrificial love of the Crucified Savior and profoundly grounded in the reality of the Church as the Body of Christ. In this way, medicine and philanthropy were consonant with the medical science of their age, but at the same time consistently incorporated in the ecclesial event.

As bearers of divine grace and imitators of the God-man Christ, who sanctified and renewed all creation through His incarnation, the objective of their endeavors was to introduce the fallen nature of humankind to the new creation by jointly healing body and soul, thereby demonstrating the value of human existence as a psychosomatic unity, but also the mutual unity between God and humanity. As preachers of truth, these Holy Physicians and Philanthropists understood that, in order for every human being to be healed, all the created world must be restored and integrated. Their philanthropy comprised an expression of the divine hospitality of the Father, who gathers His children under His bosom, the Church, the Hostel of mercy and joy. For the consolation, support and welfare of their patients, they intercede to the Great Physician and Loving God for the healing of our souls and bodies.

In the anguish, fear, pain and sorrow that emerged as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, the eyes of the faithful are turned toward these Saints with their healing gifts. These Saints constitute the special anchor and example for doctors, nurses and all those serving in the medical field, who throughout the pandemic have offered extraordinary efforts in order to save lives and provide care, treatment and relief to their fellow human beings who were suffering.

The pandemic revealed the vulnerable dimension of human nature, the prevailing imbalance in the natural environment as a result of greed, the existing division and conflict within the wider society, as well as the tensions within the Church itself. It compelled us to reflect on the way we live out our faith before the tragic threat of death, the loss of our loved ones, and the loneliness created by illness and mourning. It directed us to seek the grace of our loving God through the assistance and intercession of the Saints. Moreover, the pandemic brought to the surface the authentic meaning of philanthropy, the need for collaboration and coordination of all social actors, as well as the mandatory cooperation between Church and medical science. Indeed, the pandemic highlighted eminent individuals in the field of medicine and health care, who, as the Saints, exercised their profession and afforded care and support to the sick, contributed their services with self-sacrifice and tenderness, surpassing human standards under difficult circumstances, in order to confront the multidimensional consequences of this health crisis.

Bearing all these things in mind, our Holy and Sacred Synod decided to establish the Sunday closest to October 17th and 18th each year (when we commemorate the Synaxis of the Holy Unmercenary Healers and the Holy Apostle and Evangelist Luke the Doctor) as the day of the Synaxis of all the Holy Physicians as an appreciation for the essential contribution of the medical science and its ministers toward humanity. 

Beloved doctors and healers, we congratulate you for your invaluable service and thank you paternally, praying that the Lord God may support and strengthen you in your blessed work. We encourage you to show sincere love and compassion, to honor one another and cultivate earnest faith “serving the Lord, rejoicing in hope, being patient in tribulation, remaining constant in prayer, contributing to the needs of the saints, and practicing hospitality” (Rm 12.9-15) so that through you the Holy Trinity and Giver of all good things may be glorified.

14 comments:

  1. I thought feast days were for saints and not living persons. This doesn’t make sense to me and I don’t see the purpose. These are people that are not necessarily even Christians let alone a member of our Church. Why not a feast day for mothers and fathers? Why not for police or military who risk their lives for us? Why not for garbage collectors who save us from filth and disease? The list is endless. We are the Church not Hallmark desperate to find new reasons for people to buy greeting cards.

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    1. The purpose is simple. It is to replace Orthodox Christianity with something else entirely, boiling the frog slowly so people never realize they have become worshippers of Antichrist. This project has been underway for a while now...

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    2. Post-COVID, I have much less respect for the medical profession.

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  2. Just make up a holyday, put it on the calender. WOW!

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  3. This seems rather redundant since there is already a feast for the Holy Unmercenaries. Would not any physician Saint also be an unmercenary Saint?

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  4. The Holy Unmercenaries Feast does seem to cover it. Medicine is a gift from God, and taken in that spirit, I can see where this commemoration might fit.

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  5. Classic move by the creator of schisms...the Green Patriarch.

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    1. What would your objection to this be?

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    2. See the first four comments.

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    3. It's not an attempt to idolize science/medicine or to canonize your Jewish doctor. The new feast day is called the Synaxis of the Holy of the Physicians and refers to "these Saints" who were "bearers of divine grace and imitators of the God-man Christ." The encyclical ends by thanking doctors for all the good that they do.

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    4. Thank the doctors? For what? For pushing mRNA inoculations? For refusing to write medical exemptions? For refusing to use off label treatments for COVID? Here is a doctor with something to say.
      https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2021/10/physicians_and_the_vaccine_tyranny_.html

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    6. I'm sincerely sorry that you are disappointed and feel let down by our doctors but we cannot overlook all the good that they do. I recall a relatively recent post on this blog reporting that several fathers from a well known monastery needed to be hospitalized in order to be treated for covid. Praise be to God that their health was restored!

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    7. My doctor told me that he is beside himself. He said: "We are no longer permitted to uphold our hippocratic oath and treat people according to our training without fear of government reprisal and loss of license."

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