“Greek Orthodox Christian Church - Birmingham, Alabama”

Photography Credits: Beth Hontzas - Music: Presbytera Katerina Makiej






Sunday Sermon

RemitSinsRestoreCommunion
August 04, 2024

- Fr. Gregory Edwards, Ph.D -


Today’s Gospel reading recounts Jesus’ healing of the paralytic. Before granting him physical healing, our Lord says to him, “Your sins are forgiven.” Fr. Gregory focuses on the facets of forgiveness in today’s sermon.

First, he addresses the relationship with forgiveness and calamity. The paralytic came to Jesus not for forgiveness but for bodily healing. However, Jesus addresses the cause of his illness first by forgiving his sins. This does not mean that the paralytic was to blame for his illness on account of his sins, but rather the sinfulness of mankind in general was the cause. This is clear in another Gospel passage in which the apostles ask Jesus “Who sinned? This man or his parents?” to find blame for the man’s blindness. Jesus responds, “Neither this man nor his parents.” 

The cause of every evil, the source of all sin, is humanity’s broken communion with God. To heal evil at its root, communion with God must be restored. This is what our Lord accomplished through the Incarnation, and we see this in Jesus’ conversation with the religious leaders. When Jesus granted forgiveness of sins, the religious leaders were indignant, saying that Jesus was a blasphemer because only God could forgive sins. By forgiving the paralytic’s sins, Jesus — being both God and man — showed that humanity and divinity had indeed been united to one another, restoring the communion broken in the Garden of Eden.

Fr. Gregory also addresses humanity’s role in forgiveness. While remission of sins comes from God alone, it passes through the human nature of Christ, shown in today’s Gospel reading. When Christ rose from the dead, he granted his disciples this power to remit sins. The apostles then transferred this power to the bishops, who transferred it to priests. The mystery of repentance and confession is accomplished through this authority passed down through the church throughout the ages. While God alone can remit sins, forgiveness and reconciliation with God passes through human beings. Another aspect of humanity’s role in forgiveness is our relationships with our brothers and sisters. If we wish to be forgiven of our sins, we must first forgive the sins of one another. This is emphasized in the Lord’s Prayer.

In repentance, confession, and forgiveness, we must have humility and love. Through these two paths, we can restore our broken communion with God and reconcile our relationships with our brothers and sisters.



The Rev. Fr. Gregory Edwards, Ph.D., was raised in Virginia and eastern Pennsylvania, and became a member of the Orthodox Church while studying for his Bachelor's degree ...[more]
“Greek Orthodox Christian Church - Birmingham, Alabama”

Photography Credits: Beth Hontzas - Music: Presbytera Katerina Makiej

Sunday Morning Divine Liturgy - 9:30

307 19th Street South, Birmingham, Alabama 35233 | Fr. Gregory Edwards, Dean | 205.716.3080





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The Rev. Fr. Gregory Edwards, Ph.D., was raised in Virginia and eastern Pennsylvania, and became a member of the Orthodox Church while studying for his Bachelor's degree in Religious Studies at Brown University. After completing a Master's Degree in the New Testament and early Christianity at Florida State University, he conducted doctoral studies in Greece at Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, graduating summa cum laude in 2012. Ordained in 2007, he served parishes in Thessaloniki and Volos for 9 years. He and his wife Presvytera Pelagia lived in Greece from 2006-2016, where their four children were born. He has served as Assistant Professor of Missiology at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Seminary in New York since 2014. Before coming to Birmingham in March 2019, Fr. Gregory served St. George Greek Orthodox Church in New Port Richey, FL from 2016-2019.