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
Mar 14, 2026 2:51 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
A second renaissance?
Sunday’s Independent has three pieces on the recent application of technological advances to ancient manuscripts, which are making readable previously illegible manuscripts. According to the paper, “infra-red technology has enabled hundreds of ancient edies, tragedies and epic posed by classical greats such as Sophocles, Euripides and Hesiod, to be deciphered for the first time in 2,000 years.” Also thought to be contained in the Oxyrhynchus Papyri are early copies of Christian texts, possibly including gospel accounts. Examples of the classical...
Corruption roundup
1) According to the BBC, U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, “The bulk of the money that Saddam [Hussein] made came out of smuggling outside the oil-for-food programme, and it was on the American and British watch”. This assertion is based on the contention that the $4 billion that Hussein was alleged to have received in the oil-for-food program is “dwarfed” by the $14 billion is said to e from “sanctions-busting,” illegally smuggling oil to neighboring states such as Jordan and...
Ignoring Centesimus Annus
A defense of Pope John Paul II’s Centesimus Annus. For example, On Globalization The Claim: “John Paul II . . . thinks that capitalism goes way too far and results in oppression of people in the developing world. So economic redistribution would be a very radical position . . .” Lisa Sowle Cahill, professor of theology at Boston College. Centesimus Annus Says: “Today we are facing the so-called ‘globalization’ of the economy, a phenomenon which is not to be dismissed,...
Would you like a tax with those fries?
On this date in 1955, Ray Kroc starts the McDonald’s chain of fast food restaurants in Illinois. On a related note, Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick is the latest political figure to float the idea of a “fast food tax,” the newest incarnation of the “sin” tax. The reasoning is that fast foods, which tend to be higher in fat and cholesterol than other types of food, are unhealthy, and therefore worthy of special government attention. The Detroit Free Press editorial...
Study of clerical careers
Courtesy of Pulpit & es Factors Shaping Clergy Careers: A Wakeup Call for Protestant Denominations and Pastors (PDF), by Patricia M. Y. Chang (HT: Mere Comments). This study is based on surveys conducted primarily with mainline Protestant denominations. Perhaps most helpful are the observations of a minister whose denomination was not included. Here’s a brief excerpt from James A. Meek of the Presbyterian Church in America: The ministry is a calling, not just a career, as Chang notes at the...
A costly good
In the words of the Cornwall Declaration, “A clean environment is a costly good.” A round-up of recent stories attests to the truth of this statement. Wal-Mart pledged on Tuesday to provide $35 million for use to protect wildlife habitat. Wal-Mart can afford to use this money to “buy an amount of land equal to all the land its stores, parking lots and distribution centers use over the next 10 years” in part because of its economic success, topping the...
The extent of European antipathy towards Christianity
After Pope John Paul II’s death on April 2, the European Parliament was torn over a “difficult” decision – whether to lower the flags of the European Institution to half-mast. It seems that some members thought it was inappropriate to honor one of the most pro-European statesmen who ever lived with such a simple gesture. Eventually, they came to their senses and agreed to do so. Now it seems that the Polish members of the Euro Parliament have bit off...
What do you call this?
From Live Science, there are plans to create a pseudo-woolly mammoth from frozen DNA. The trick is to take the male sperm DNA from a woolly mammoth sample and the egg from its closest living relative, the elephant. “By repeating the procedure with offspring, a creature 88 percent mammoth could be produced within fifty years.” Such a creature is technically a chimera, “an organism or tissue created from two or more different genetic sources.” This usage is related to the...
Too much transparency
The incongruence of a culture that insists on knowledge of every detail about charity donations and yet puts no value on a disabled woman’s life is frankly mind-boggling. But let’s move beyond value of human life and focus on the importance of telling the truth and being honest. Stanley Carlson-Thies, formerly of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives, makes a superb point that like too much of any good thing, too much transparency just might “turn” on...
Wholphin watch
Hot on the trail of chimeras as a service to you, dear reader, I pass along this story about the offspring of a dolphin and a whale. Apparently these so-called “wholphins” have been found in the wild. Wholphins, as whale-dolphin hybrids, are a less-famous form of chimera than more famous ligers (mules are the most famous). According to Napoleon Dynamite, a liger is “pretty much my favorite animal. It’s like a lion and a tiger mixed. Bred for its skills...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved