Quotes of the Day for April 3, 2026 – Thoughts on the Christian Journey
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“Christians must embody the struggle for holiness in every dimension of their lives and support one another as they pursue the difficult journey to the life of the Kingdom….each of our lives should be seen as a quest or a pilgrimage, which can only be understood in terms of a narrative. Our life-journey is a life-story.” (Fr. Philip LeMasters, Joseph Pearce)
“Life in Christ is thus not a journey that happens with angels and demons on the periphery. Rather, it means that He rescues us from slavery to demonic forces. Life in Christ means joining Him and His angels as He defeats His demonic enemies…The Christian life is thus a journey of the person toward and with Christ, with angels as occasional helpers and demons as enemies who try to hinder the quest. The Hero’s Journey is the model for the Christian, whose story is about him or herself. Spirits are marginal characters whose presence or absence does not fundamentally alter the plot.” (Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick)
“There is a story about Rabbi Zusha weeping on his deathbed about how God would judge him. When his disciples tried to comfort the rabbi by comparing him to Moses and Abraham, he said, “When I get to Heaven, I will not be asked, ‘Why weren’t you like Moses, or why weren’t you like Abraham?’ They will ask, ‘Why weren’t you like Zusha?’…Christ never asks us to be someone we are not, but instead to embrace the journey of becoming evermore our true selves in Him…we cannot know ourselves until we know the unknowable God. Created in His image and likeness, we are irreducibly bound to the knowledge of God in the journey toward our true selves.” (Fr. Philip LeMasters, Father Stephen Freeman)
“God arranges for us precisely those tribulations that will move us forward on our spiritual journey by showing us our own weakness and God’s strength. If we open our hearts to Him in honest confession and repentance, He meets us in those tribulations with a grace and strength we could not have imagined.” (Holy Synod of OCA Bishops)
“While being virtuous is hard and even harder when practiced alone, it becomes especially difficult when one experiences a dearth of good men. I mean, just as travel involves hardship, and much more so when the traveler is alone and has no one with whom to share the journey, so too in this case. In other words, fellowship and fraternal encouragement are no small thing…The spiritual path towards true existence is difficult and even tedious. It requires attention and repentance, the willingness to expose ourselves to God in the naked, honest truth. However, this is not a journey we make alone. St. Paul declares, “Christ within us, the hope of glory.” (Col. 1:27) If St. Silouan was correct in declaring, “My brother is my life,” then we must understand that Jesus has said as much of us: “You are my life.” We have no such declaration in the gospel, but we are told, “…that you may dwell in Me, and I in you.” We have been shaped far too deeply in our modern individualist world-view. We hear Jesus saying nothing more than, “I’ll help you from time to time,” and we pray in precisely that manner. We fail to see that the Life-of-Christ-in-me is also living and willing my life (Phil. 2:13). Learning to live in union with Him, in a communion of life and action, is the very heart of the life of grace.” (St. John Chrysostom, Father Stephen Freeman)

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