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@pickpickdxd

Katılım Mart 2022
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Ève
Ève@JemappelleEve·
@Aku_700 This happens every year in Greece. Just because the rest of you were asleep doesn’t mean we were. And our Easter is next Sunday
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Ubi Petrus
Ubi Petrus@UbiPetrus2019·
It was Lazarus Saturday in 2003 that I was received into the Orthodox Church.
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Father Elias Villis
Father Elias Villis@FrEliasVillis·
The servant of God Mihali was baptized this afternoon, clothed in Christ and illumined by His grace. May her life be filled with faith, strength, and the joy of walking in the light of the Lord. Welcome Home!!
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UOJ - America
UOJ - America@UOJ_America·
MOSCOW — Two of the most revered icons of the Mother of God—the Vladimir Icon of the Mother of God and the Donskoy Icon of the Mother of God—have been transferred from the State Tretyakov Gallery to the Russian Orthodox Church for free use over the next 49 years. Both sacred images are now housed in Cathedral of Christ the Savior, according to Church officials.
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Peter B
Peter B@realpeteyb123·
It’s Palm Sunday. Listen to the bells ringing from Holy Resurrection Cathedral - St. Nikolai in Tokyo, Japan 東京復活大聖堂 🇯🇵 ☦️
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Homer Pavlos
Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos·
The Muslim Turks, in order to terrorize the Greeks, impaled and roasted alive Athanasios Diakos. But, they gave him a chance: “Will you become a Turk, Diakos? Will you change your faith? Will you pray in the mosque and abandon the church?” He replied to them: “Go away, you and your faith, may you perish, you renegades! I was born a Greek, and as a Greek I shall die.” According to eyewitness accounts from the time, two Turks lit a fire next to the stable and placed an iron grate and a large copper cauldron filled with oil over it. Then they lifted Diakos, still bound as he was, and made him sit on an old wooden stool. They raised his legs. The Turks began to mock him, asking him various questions. For every negative nod, they drove nails into his feet. Afterwards, they took the boiling oil and first poured it over his bare feet. When they saw that he did not react, they tore his clothing and began pouring it on his back and chest. He groaned silently in pain, and the soldiers, under orders not to kill him, used needles to burst the blisters that had formed on his skin from the boiling oil. This continued for hours, until the next morning. Exhausted as he was, they dragged him through the town to execute him. His execution was carried out in public view with the permission of Halil Bey, so that the Greeks would be warned about what would happen to anyone who dared to revolt. Testimonies state that even Diakos’s mother was present at his torture. After tying him backwards onto a saddle with his legs spread apart, the executioner began pushing the sharp tip of a wooden stake into his groin area and then slowly drove it deeper, going all the way through his body until it emerged near his right ear. The executioner moved carefully, as he had orders not to kill him quickly; with every push of the stake, Diakos’s screams confirmed he was still alive. Once the executioner had finished his work, the Turks tied the body tightly with the stake so that the skin would not tear, and they propped him up, almost upright, against a tree. As he was dying, it is said that he uttered these sorrowful verses: “Look at the time Death has chosen to take me, now, when the branches are blossoming and the earth brings forth grass.” Halil Bey gave the order to light a fire beneath him and to turn him slowly, so that he would be roasted alive like an animal. After many hours of torture, the Greek chieftain passed away on April 24, 1821. However, this had the opposite effect from what the Turks had expected. When the Greeks learned of his story and his martyrdom, they were filled with even greater rage and strength to liberate themselves from the barbarous Muslims and Islam. Athanasios Diakos is one of the most important heroes in the Greek history.
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Homer Pavlos@HomerPavlos

The Muslim Turks loved flaying (skinning) alive Christians. They applied it mainly against Greek rebels to deter and discipline others. As usual, the Christian victim was beaten, publicly humiliated, and tied to a special scaffold for immobilization. Then, skilled executioners removed his skin with sharp knives before the crowd. Here are 3 characteristic cases. The first concerns Dionysios, Greek Bishop of Larisa and Trikki, who lived in the 16th–17th centuries. An enlightened hierarch with brilliant studies in philosophy, medicine, theology, and more at major Western universities, he earned the title "Philosopher." In the early 17th century (1601 and 1611), he initiated two revolutionary movements in Thessaly and Epirus. Both failed, and in 1611 he was captured alive. In Ioannina's central square, before a crowd, he was skinned alive in a martyrdom lasting five hours, aged around 70. The vandalism continued: his flayed body was thrown to dogs, while his skin was stuffed with straw and bran, dressed in archiepiscopal vestments, and paraded through the city with music for days. Finally, it was sent to the Sultan and ended up discarded in the royal stables. Another well-known case is that of Daskalogiannis. On June 17, 1771, he was led to a central square in Chandax (Heraklion). A wooden scaffold with a special seat had been erected. Tied tightly to it, he was flayed starting from the head by a monstrous executioner who threw pieces of skin to the crowd, saying: "Take leather for your boots!" A second executioner periodically showed him his flayed face in a mirror, mocking: "Look, captain, how well the red suits you!" Relatives (brother and daughter) in the crowd went mad at the sight. He endured steadfastly and died when the flaying reached his shoulder blades. His flayed body remained exposed in the June heat for days in that square (now named in his honor) until the stench forced the Turks to bury it. The third case is that of the Venetian Marco Antonio Bragadin. He was executed by flaying in August 1571 in Famagusta, Cyprus, after defending the island alongside the Greeks. They first cut off both of Bragadin’s ears and his nose. While he was in captivity, a massacre of all the remaining Christians in the city took place. After being left in prison for two weeks with his wounds festering, he was dragged around the city walls carrying sacks of earth and stone on his back. Next, he was tied to a chair and hoisted to the yardarm of the Turkish flagship, where he was exposed to the taunts of the sailors. Finally, he was taken to the main square, tied naked to a column, and flayed alive. Bragadin’s quartered body was then distributed as war trophies among the army, while his skin was stuffed with straw, sewn back together, reinvested with his military insignia, and exhibited riding an ox in a mocking procession through the streets of Famagusta. In 1580, his skin was stolen by Girolamo Polidori and brought back to Venice, where it remains today in the Basilica di San Giovanni e Paolo. The martyrdom of flaying (skinning alive) is ancient. Herodotus mentions that it was originally practiced by the Scythians. He describes how Scythian warriors treated conquered foes, using their enemies' skin to manufacture leather trophy items. Archaeology has recently confirmed Herodotus' account. Scalp flaying was called "periskythismos" due to this Scythian custom. It was always a sign of barbarity and fortunately an exception rather than the rule. The punishment was also used by the Romans during persecutions of Christian martyrs, the best-known case being the apostle Bartholomew. - Homer Pavlos

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I dunno
I dunno@Idunno556334·
@MilisVeritas 31 at our church! You you wife and others who posed online about joining the Holy Orthodox Church!! My heart is screaming with joy!! 🥲 Glory to God ☦️☦️☦️
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Celtic Dalton
Celtic Dalton@ZacharyCooney17·
Praise God am now officially an Orthodox Christian
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AE
AE@bbysoulambs·
Orthodox Christianity feels like coming home. worshipping the Lord with my entire mind, body, soul, and heart. experiencing the love and grace and mercy of Christ, and the joy of the Heavens which is outside of time. more than this, i have learned to forgive and love my enemies, to carry my disdain for evil whilst not being overtaken by it, to suffer without despair, and to fall without shame. when i first entered a year ago, i had already began getting attacked by getting into two car accidents and having surgery. i lost my car, my job, my version of worldly success, and everyone in my life turned against me. i was in bed for months on bed only able to turn to God and cry out—“Lord, have mercy.” He has been faithful to carry me through this trouble, and has gifted me with more than i can imagine. eyes to see, ears to hear, a heart that is often hardened but continually is cracked open by His love and the Body and Blood He so freely offers. from someone who had spent 24 years wanting to die, i can say now… i am glad to be alive. with Him, i can experience Heaven even in this fallen world. and though i am unworthy, with boldness, i draw near over and over like the prodigal daughter i am, trusting in His infinite compassion and love.
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Michael (Paisios) Davis
Michael (Paisios) Davis@paisiosdavis·
Went to a Moscow Patriarchate parish for Vespers. Wonderful experience. Never had so many people come up and greet me when visitinf a church before. ~50% convert. Hundreds of millions of souls are being saved by the MP. Don't let anyone reduce the Russian Church to a caricature.
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payden☦︎
payden☦︎@Payden_3x·
was just baptized into the Holy Orthodox Church, glory to God!
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AE
AE@bbysoulambs·
today i am getting baptized as an orthodox christian. glory to Christ forever
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