Saturday, May 9, 2026
Liturgical Color: White/Gold
The Fifth Sunday of Easter
Almighty God, whom truly to know is everlasting life: Grant us so perfectly to know your Son Jesus Christ to be the way, the truth, and the life, that we may steadfastly follow his steps in the way that leads to eternal glory; through Jesus Christ your Son our Lord, who lives and reigns with you, in the unity of the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen.
Easter
But chiefly are we bound to praise you for the glorious resurrection of your Son Jesus Christ our Lord; for he is the true Paschal Lamb, who was offered for us, and has taken away the sin of the world; who by his death has destroyed death, and by his rising to life again has won for us everlasting life.
The Sixth Sunday of Easter (Rogation Sunday)
Bishop of Constantinople and Doctor of the Church
Ecumenical Commemoration
Gregory of Nazianzus is called 'The Theologian' by Eastern tradition because his five great Orations defending Trinitarian theology became the definitive patristic statement of Christian doctrine. Reluctant in all positions of authority, he briefly presided over the First Council of Constantinople in 381 and then retired from public ministry to live as a monk, leaving behind a remarkable body of theological, poetical, and autobiographical writings that rank among the finest in Christian literature.
Gregory was born around 329 in Nazianzus, a town in Cappadocia, to a Christian family of considerable wealth and culture. His father, also named Gregory, was a bishop; his mother, Nonna, was a woman of profound faith. Gregory received an excellent classical education, studying rhetoric and philosophy at Athens, where he formed a lasting friendship with the future Saint Basil the Great.
Despite his family's ecclesiastical connections and his evident intellectual gifts, Gregory showed a lifelong reluctance toward positions of authority. After his baptism and ordination as a priest around 361, he withdrew to a monastic community where he devoted himself to theological study and contemplative prayer. This pattern — reluctant conscription into ministry, brilliant performance, and eventual withdrawal — characterizes his entire career.
In 372, Basil consecrated Gregory as bishop of Sasima, a small see in Cappadocia, intending to strengthen his own position. Gregory protested the appointment and eventually abandoned the see, returning to live as a monk in his family's monastery. When he reluctantly returned to serve his father's church at Nazianzus around 375, he became known throughout Cappadocia as a powerful preacher and theological teacher.
In 379, Gregory was summoned to Constantinople to defend orthodox Trinitarian theology against the Arian bishop Demophilus, who had dominated the imperial capital for decades. During the next few years, Gregory delivered his most famous works: the Five Theological Orations (Orations 27–31), which systematically established the full divinity of the Holy Spirit, explained the nature of the Trinity, and refuted Arian logic with unprecedented philosophical and theological rigor.
When the Council of Constantinople convened in 381 to ratify Nicene orthodoxy, Gregory was named to preside over it. The council confirmed the Nicene faith, condemned various heresies, and elevated Gregory's status in the Church. However, the council became embroiled in jurisdictional disputes regarding the Eastern sees, and Gregory — unable to bear the conflict — resigned from his episcopal see and returned to his monastic life in Nazianzus, where he spent his final years in prayer, writing, and theological composition. He died in 389 and was immediately recognized as one of the greatest theological minds in the Church.
What makes Gregory's achievement remarkable is not merely the rigor of his theology but its integration with deep spirituality and literary beauty. His writings — including his autobiographical poem De Vita Sua — reveal a man of extraordinary self-awareness and honest faith. He grapples with doubt, burnout, and the tension between the contemplative and active life, making him one of the most psychologically complex figures in patristic literature.
Traditionally, Gregory's lifelong reluctance toward ecclesiastical office was understood as humility and a preference for the contemplative over the active life — a theme he himself emphasized in his writings. His retreat from public ministry after the Council of Constantinople was interpreted as a prophetic witness against ecclesiastical ambition. Eastern tradition particularly honors him as 'The Theologian' — a title suggesting that his theological work was understood as divinely inspired.