Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Associational Support in a Digital Age: In Memoriam of Fr. Matthew Baker
Associational Support in a Digital Age: In Memoriam of Fr. Matthew Baker
Apr 29, 2026 3:38 PM

Fr. Matthew Baker

Alexis de Tocqueville, observing the young United States in the 1830s, wrote, “Wherever, at the head of a new undertaking, you see in France the government, and in England, a great lord, count on seeing in the United States, an association.” In the midst of recent tragedy — the untimely death of Fr. Matthew Baker, a Greek Orthodox priest killed in a car accident this past Sunday evening, leaving behind his wife and six children — it is a source of hope to see that this American associational persistence is still alive in the present.

Without hesitation, friends of Fr. Matthew set up a page at the crowd funding site gofundme, and they have already raised a tremendous sum to support Presvytera Katherine and the children.

The loss of Fr. Matthew has been felt far beyond Orthodox Christian circles and close friends. Americans across the country, utilizing modern technology for this good work, e together across confessional lines to help a family they have never personally known.

As for myself, I had only just begun to know Fr. Matthew. I regret that is all I can say. We both were contributors to Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy and belong to a Facebook group related to our writing there. I had just spoken with him (via Facebook) the previous night, not even 24 hours before his death.

It is tempting to think that just because fewer people belong to bowling leagues, for example, American civil society is in decline. In fact, there is some good evidence to support that claim. But there is also evidence that our associations are not so much disappearing as transforming. In this case, at any rate, I am thankful to see this same associational spirit in America today.

Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick wrote a wonderful memoir earlier this week in memoriam of his departed friend. The following especially connected with me. Though I did not get a chance to see Fr. Matthew in this way, I cherish those in my life like him, “whose genius opens you up and helps you feel that you can be better.” He writes,

There are some geniuses whose genius makes you stand in awe as you gaze upon something you could never do yourself, and you see them as beyond you. And there are some geniuses whose genius opens you up and helps you feel that you can be better, be more, that you can be invited into that same world of light and joy. Fr. Matthew’s genius was that latter sort. He was always inviting you in, always ready to engage.

Fr. Andrew has also piling a hub for the many tributes to Fr. Matthew that continue to pour in here.

If you would like to support this family in this time of loss and need and carry on that great American associational tradition, you can do so here.

Lastly, I cannot speak of the death of a man who had given his life to the Gospel of Jesus Christ without a reminder of what hope that Gospel promises those who receive it. In the midst of all the tragedy, disorder, death, and evil in this world, Christians do not worship a god aloof from the world nor one who is a mere part of it and subject, with us, to the whims of fate and fortune. Rather, we proclaim every Pascha (Easter), toward which we now journey in the bright sadness of Great Lent, “Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life!” He is the God who so loved the world that he took all its evil upon himself and proved himself to be greater than every source of our despair, even death. And in him, we are given the grace not to escape this world of evil, but to transfigure it into something good and beautiful once again. As the Apostle John put it, “For whatever is born of God es the world. And this is the victory that has e the world—our faith” (1 John 5:4). So too, it seems, was the effect of the grace of Christ through the faith of Fr. Matthew.

In the words of the Orthodox memorial service, “May your memory be eternal, dear brother, for you are worthy of blessedness and everlasting memory.”

Memory eternal, Fr. Matthew. Requiescat in pace.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Support for Government Redistribution Has Fallen (Except Among Liberals)
A new report from the liberal Brookings Institute finds that “despite the large increases in economic inequality since 1970”, American survey respondents exhibit no increase in support for redistribution. This holds true even for the two groups who have historically been most reliant on redistribution: the elderly and blackAmericans. The report expresses surprise by the results, as does the Washington Post. As the Post‘sMax Ehrenfreund says, Thepolling data challenges mon-sense ideathat voters support policies that are in their material interest,...
Ridding Labor Supply Chains Of Human Trafficking
While sex trafficking gets a lot of media attention, labor trafficking is the larger problem globally. Recently, the largest court case ever involving labor trafficking was settled in Mississippi against Signal International. (You can read more about the case here.) Labor trafficking is not a secret. However, we are just beginning to grasp the scope of the problem and the deep wounds it inflicts on its victims. In The Economist this week, the magazine goes so far as to say...
Bring Back Childhood Chores: How Hard Work Cultivates Character
Today’s parents are obsessed with setting their kids on strategic paths to “success,” filling their dayswith language camps, music lessons, advanced petitive sports, chess clubs, museum visits, and so on. Much of this is beneficial, of course, but amid the bustle, at least one formative experience is increasingly cast aside: good, old-fashioned hard work. In an essay for the Wall Street Journal, Jennifer Breheny Wallace points to a recent survey of U.S. adults where “82% reported having regular chores growing...
The Perils Of ‘Friendly Fascism’
Wouldn’t it be nice if we could all just get along? We could share all our stuff. You know, you could borrow my cashmere sweater that I saved up for, and I could borrow your Che Guevara t-shirt you got at in the dollar bin at the local flea market. Isn’t that what Christians are supposed to do? John Zmirak thinks otherwise. At The Stream, Zmirak takes on those Christians who have a warm, fuzzy spot in their misguided hearts...
Explainer: What You Should Know About the Rubio-Lee Tax Plan
What is the Rubio-Lee Plan? The plan—officially titled the “Economic Growth and Family Fairness Tax Plan”—is a white paper in which Senators Marco Rubio (R-Florida) and Mike Lee (R-Utah) lay out a tax reform proposal they believes will “resolve these major problems in the tax code.” What’s in the plan? The plan has two main sections, one “pro-growth” and one “pro-family.” The pro-growth side of the plan includes seven mended changes: Full expensing for all businessesCreating parity on the taxation...
Canadian Supreme Court: Gov. Can’t Force Catholic Schools to Teach Contrary to Its Beliefs
In an important victory for religious liberty in Canada, the country’s Supreme Court ruled unanimously today that the government cannot force a private Catholic high school to teach a government-mandated ethics and religion course that includes teaching contrary to Catholic belief. An attorney working with the Alliance Defending Freedom International filed a brief last year with the high court in defense of the school after the court granted them the right to intervene in defense of the school’s freedom of...
Human Trafficking Victims Lose Out To Partisanship
A bill designed to aid victims of human trafficking in the U.S. should not be divisive. It should not be stalled in the House of Representatives. It should be enacted swiftly, so as to get help to as many victims as possible, as quickly as possible. This bill would improve programs already in place that are specifically designed to aid underage victims of trafficking, increase the ease of which local law enforcement and prosecutors can investigate possible trafficking and child...
3 reasons to oppose mandatory voting
While speaking in Cleveland yesterday President Obama came out in favor of making voting in pulsory: In Australia and some other countries, there’s mandatory voting. It would be transformative if everybody voted — that would counteract money more than anything. If everybody voted, it pletely change the political map in this country. Because the people who tend not to vote are young, they’re lower e, they’re skewed more heavily towards immigrant groups and minority groups… So that may end up...
Putin’s Kleptocracy and Family Values
There will be some twists and turns here, so hold on. Earlier this month, the BBC highlighted what it called “YouTube sensation ‘I, Russian Occupier'” the hit propaganda film that “feels more like the opening sequence of a big budget Hollywood movie than a homemade political message.” So far, it’s racked up 5.6 million views and more than ments. (“likes” are outpacing down votes by a 5-1 margin. The video also “attacks Western values, dropping in visual references to same-sex...
Women Of Liberty: Jane Marcet
Jane Marcet is remembered most often for her scientific work in chemistry. Born in London in 1769, she was well-educated, and shared a passion for learning with her father. When she married Alexander Marcet, a physician, she would proof-read his work and eventually decided to publish her own thoughts. In a series of pamphlets entitled, “Conversations,” Marcet wrote on chemistry, botany, religion, and economics. She was a member of the London Political Economy Club, founded by James Mill. In the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved