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You are here: Home / Patristic Sermons / Christians Do Not Believe in Kismet, Fate or Destiny

November 12, 2010 By admin

Christians Do Not Believe in Kismet, Fate or Destiny

by St. Nikolai Velimirovich

Christians do not believe in kismet, fate or destiny.

Even if God determines the chief lines of our life, He, according to our prayers and merits, can change them.

Thus, He prolonged King Hezekiah’s life for fifteen years:

“Go and say to Hezekiah, thus said the Lord, the God of David Your father, I have heard your prayer, I have seen your tears: behold I will add unto your days fifteen years” (Isaiah 38:5),

and to the Venerable Dius (July 19) he likewise prolonged his life for fifteen years. God extended the life of St. Basil the Great, according to the prayer of the saint, for one day until he baptized the Jew, Joseph, his physician.

But, as God can, by prayer, prolong life, so He can shorten it because of sin. Emperor Anastasius adhered to the Severian heresy, so called the Acephalites (the headless ones), who spread the foolishness that the Church does not need bishops and priests but rather that everyone unto himself is a bishop and a priest and that everyone has the right, in his own way, to interpret Holy Scripture and to teach others as he understands and believes. In vain did St. John the Patriarch counsel the emperor to return to the truth of Orthodoxy, and not only did the emperor not accept the counsel but rather ill-treated the patriarch in various ways and contemplated to have him banished. One night, the emperor saw in a dream an awesome man on an exalted throne, who held a book in his hand. This man opened the book, found the name of Emperor Anastasius and said:

“I have wanted to permit you to live for a while longer but, because of your heresy, behold, I am erasing fourteen years from your life.”

And he erased something from the book. Terrified, the emperor jumped up from his dream and related his dream to his followers. After a few days, thunder struck the emperor’s place and killed Emperor Anastasius.

Filed Under: Patristic Sermons Tagged With: destiny, fate, Hezekiah, kismet, st. nikolai velimirovich, the Lord

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