Arsenios
Well-known member
Sometimes brevity is the most important aspect of a well written text. Great answer and I didn't have to stay up all night, tying to figure out what the heck you were talking about.
I hadn't weighed in on this one, but it is, for the Orthodox, a no-brainer...
You see, the Psalms were not numbered, and in the first thousand years, IF you were going to be an Orthodox Bishop, the Canonical requirement was that you had memorized the entire Psalter of 150 Psalms... So that each Psalm was designated by its opening words, which would trigger the memory for the rest...
So that for the Orthodox, the Son was obviously NOT being abandoned by the Father in the agony of the Cross... But instead The Son was giving witness to the Scripture...
That said, there does come a time in one's advancement in relationship with Christ, Who is OUR Father, when at the end, we will be tempted where we think that we are abandoned by God, and it is a pivotal point, because it is there that we are to hold to the Good no matter what, knowing that the Good is Good for Goodness, and that even in the absence of the One Who Good IS, we still want the Good...
Or not...
Which separates some chaff from the wheat...
"Precious in the Sight of the Lord...
Is the Death of His Holy Ones..."
Arsenios