If Orthodoxy is not just for Sundays, but is for all of our life, then it is to be lived and experienced with the heart of faith. Nowhere is this more needed than now, in the Coronavirus, where millions of Orthodox believers world-wide are unable to go to church, and many cannot easily access the sacraments.
The 18th century Elder, St Paisius Velichkovsky wrote:"According to our faith, the grace of God also is given to us. If faith is small, little will be given. If we believe more, we shall be vouchsafed more grace for patience. Nothing happens to us apart from God's providence and His ordering." (Little Russian Philokalia, Vol. IV St Paisius Velichkovsky, St Herman Press, New Valaam, AL, 1994, p. 126)
In the parish where I serve, we can't get a priest to come until all this is over, and we've already not had a priest for over two months.
There is a real need to try and install in oneself faith that is big enough to rise to the challenge of this unique pastoral and personal spiritual situation. The Psalmist in psalm 50 wrote: "A broken and contrite heart, God will not despise". We can't go to confession right now. We can't receive Our Lord in the eucharistic gifts, gathering as a community in our temple, at least not yet.
We can however seek to install in our lives a faith that is not small. Before our icons our home can become a temple of God. Elder Cleopa of Romania wrote that prayer "which takes place with the intellect in the heart has great significance, for it unites our soul with Jesus Christ and through Him with the Father..." (Elder Cleopa of Romania, (2013), The Truth of our Faith: Volume Two The Christian Mysteries, Uncut Mountain Press, Thessalonica, Greece, p. 109)
Elder Cleopa also says that we can commune with God by keeping His commandments, and commune with God by reading the Holy Scriptures. These grace filled tools are open to us right now, in our homes, priest or no priest.
This Coronavirus hit the world in Great Lent, depriving us of a normal Pascha. In my own church, reader services of Pascha were served, from the Acts of the Apostles, through to the typica.
When I came home Divine Liturgies were being streamed around the world. I felt gratitude to those monasteries and churches live-streaming services, and preaching that deification in Christ, theosis is still possible, that a faith that is not small can be lived today.

