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Mother Christophora, Fr. Roman Braga
The ever-memorable Fr. Roman went through the purifying fire of suffering in Communist Romanian prisons, and after his relocation to the United States, he became the spiritual father of the nuns, both Romanian and American, in Ellwood City and later in Rives Junction, Michigan. His legacy is enduring, and may his memory be eternal!
Priest George Maximov, Julia Posashko
The guest of today’s program is Yulia Posashko, a former Baptist.
Protopriest Andrei Sommer
Orthodox Christianity teaches that a person finds happiness and meaning only in God. But this ideal can be replaced with the notion of service to another god, in this case, revolution. Devoting one’s life to revolution might at first bring a degree of satisfaction, but in the end delivers sorrow and tragedy both to the revolutionary and to his family and entire nation.
Archbishop Mark (Arndt), Hieromonk Ignaty (Shestakov)
We spoke to Archbishop Mark of Berlin and Germany of ROCOR--who had contributed a great deal towards the overcoming of division in the Russian Church--about the experience of the Church over the last decade, about the importance of venerating the New Martyrs, and about the events and processes that made reconciliation possible.
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Priest Roman Vityuk
Priest Roman Vityuk speaks about why residents of Russia’s backwoods pray for the Chinese, whether we should be afraid of China or display a good Christian interest in it, why in the Chinese version of the prayer “Our Father” the word “bread” is replaced with “rice”, and what kind of people we should be in order to have success in our Orthodox mission to China.