Homily for the Sunday of the Paralytic
On Sinful Habits
By St. Makarios Kalogeras of Patmos (+ 1737)
On Sinful Habits
By St. Makarios Kalogeras of Patmos (+ 1737)
A person is naturally inclined to feel sorrow and pain at the misfortunes and calamities of others. Perhaps because they are common, or because we are all of the same substance, or because a person does not know “what the coming day will bring.” He is not certain that later the thorns of pains which he sees in others will not also grow in himself. For these reasons, one is rightly drawn into a sympathetic disposition when he observes the illnesses and sufferings of his fellow human beings.
Who, then, would be so hard in heart, so beast-like in disposition, as not to grieve and not to feel compassion today, hearing from the holy Gospel of those many years which today’s paralytic spent lying down, like an insensible stone, upon a bed? Whose soul would not feel pain, hearing that this wretched man was not only paralyzed but also in extreme poverty, and for this reason was deserted by friends, deprived of relatives? Who would not feel compassion, when he considers not only the pains caused to him by the very grave illness of paralysis, but also the sorrow and the complaint that he felt when he saw the Angel troubling the water of the pool, another being healed and departing, while he himself remained always lying there?








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