Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

The spiritual messages of the Resurrection through the eyes of a Bulgarian theologian

Photo: Veselina Velcheva

This year, Orthodox and Catholic Christians will celebrate the Resurrection of Christ together. On the same date, the entire Christian world will turn its gaze to the empty tomb and will try, to the best of its ability, to empathize with the amazement of the myrrh-bearing women who were the first to see it. Although Catholics celebrate this day with appropriate solemnity, they attach more importance to the Nativity of Christ, while for the Orthodox Church, the "holiday of holidays" is precisely Easter. 


According to Dr. Zlatina Karavalcheva, a historian and expert in Byzantine studies and a theologian, it is not important which is the greater holiday, but what is the meaning of Christ being born, dying and resurrecting.

Many of us celebrate according to tradition, without understanding the essence of the Resurrection and thus lose out on the fullness of joy that this day generously offers. They load it with symbolism about the rebirth of nature, but symbols do not nourish the human soul. What is it that we are missing?

Dr. Zlatina Karavalcheva
"As Christians, we do not believe that it is about metaphors and symbols,". "Christmas is not about the birth of a new beginning, which we all welcome and know from our life experience. In the same way, Resurrection is not about the constant cycle of life, in which every death is followed by resurrection and a new life, which, however, sinks into death again, only to be reborn again - no, this reading of Christian holidays is rooted in our limited human horizon. And the Church calls us to look beyond it and understand that God does all this - He is born as a man, lives as a man and is resurrected, as no man has done up to this point, in order to solve humanity's great problem with death", says Dr. Zlatina Karavalcheva and continues:


"This is the core of the Christian faith - that Christ is resurrected not in the way he resurrects Lazarus or other people who died during their life on earth. Although resurrected, Lazarus later dies, as everyone dies. man. With Christ it is different – ​​he dies like any other man, but then he does something that none of us can do: he is resurrected never to die again. The possibility of resurrection, that all people will be resurrected, not metaphorically, not figuratively, but actually, is the core of the Christian faith. Christianity is meaningless, it becomes light, it becomes relativized without this faith in the Resurrection, which is a final and lasting victory over death."


Christ's tender attention to social outsiders, whom society recognizes as immoral, unfulfilled people - this is very clearly and distinctly noticeable in the Gospel. Christ shows them special care, not to relativize their problems, to show them that it is possible, but to say that as you are, with all your wounds, with your bleeding soul and heart, you are My creations and bear My image and this image cannot be erased. And this is Christ's message to each of us: deep in the core of every person lives the indelible face of Christ. It is to him that Christ reaches out, it is this image that He wants to awaken in each of us."



Read also:


Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

The Hotantsa Sarma Festival: a taste of centuries-old tradition

The village of Hotantsa, near the Danube city of Ruse, is hosting the Hotantsa Sarma Festival , a celebration of Bulgaria’s culinary and folk heritage. Organised by the local cultural and community centre ( chitalishte ) Svetlina-1928 , the festival..

published on 11/1/25 10:05 AM

Priest Julian Angelov helps Bulgarians in Geneva discover other dimensions of wealth

He does not accept the definition of "apostle" or "missionary", although for many he is exactly that - a messenger of God in the world, proclaiming His Word. He first became a priest in his native Vidin diocese, in Northwestern..

published on 11/1/25 5:50 AM
Mimi Nicheva

Bulgarian Sunday School in Athens Hosts Conference on AI in Education

Over 80% of Bulgarians are expected to start using artificial intelligence in the next three years , across all age groups. Today, it is almost impossible to find a Bulgarian student who does not turn to ChatGPT when preparing homework. This..

published on 10/31/25 6:01 PM