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MYSTAGOGY

MYSTAGOGY
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J.Sanidopoulos
This weblog offers insights and analysis on various matters of life and thought from a 21st century Orthodox Christian perspective, among other things.
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Friday, December 3, 2010

Fr. John Romanides' Encounter With the Zoe Brotherhood


Yesterday I made a post "The Prophetic Letter of Fr. John Romanides To Fr. Theoklitos Dionysiatis". This was a private letter sent by Fr. John to Fr. Theoklitos on Mount Athos just a few months after the publication of his ground-breaking thesis titled The Ancestral Sin, and it was received with enthusiasm. However, the contents of the letter were leaked to Archbishop Michael of North and South America, a strong supporter of the Zoe Brotherhood, and for this Fr. John faced consequences, marking true the saying of the Lord: "A prophet is not without honour, but in his own country, and among his own kin, and in his own house" (Mark 6:4).

Below I will offer three excerpts from the private correspondence between Fr. John Romanides and his professor and close friend Fr. George Florovsky to shed more light on the urgency of Fr. John's letter to Fr. Theoklitos, in which also Fr. John explains to Fr. George what happened following the leak of its contents to Archbishop Michael. Both Fr. Romanides and Fr. Florovsky were highly critical of the Zoe Brotherhood and the scholastic form of theology taught in the Greek theological schools at the time.


Excerpt From the Letter Dated March 25, 1958:

The theological situation in Greece is a major catastrophe. The only sound Orthodox I met were a few monks on Mt. Athos who hate Androutsos and Trembelas and the Universities in general and actually think in patristic terms. This even the more ignorant monks do. Their only set-back is that they are completely out of touch with the modern forms of Western theology. If there is to be any theological revival in Greece it will be from the monastic communities. People like Karmiris are more interested in Karmiris than theology. If the Greek theologians could theologize with the cleverness with which they play politics and advance their personal interests they would be giants.

Excerpt From the Letter Dated May 11, 1958:

Upon returning to New York I found waiting for me a letter from the Archbishop informing me that I am temporarily fired from all possible positions related to the Archdiocese until such time that I show humility and repentance in my attitude to the brotherhood of Ζωή [Zoe]. I had written a letter to Θεόκλητος Διονυσιάτης [Theoklitos Dionysiatis] of Mt. Athos in which I discussed very briefly the relationship of Orthodox dogma and monasticism and how a false theology inevitably brings on an activistic form of piety as is peculiar to Western Christians and to Ζωή in Greece, and I also discussed how this activism is the only type of Christianity known and respected by the Greeks in America. I mentioned that the Greeks in America are rife for a Ζωή type of pious movement since we have no monks, ascetics or monastery to set an example of the highest form of Orthodox spiritual life. It is quite natural for Orthodox influenced by Western theological categories and ignorant of the ascetic presuppositions of Orthodox dogma to express their misunderstandings of Orthodoxy in patterns of Church life familiar to the non-Orthodox religious groups in this country. I asked concerning the possibility of transplanting a monastic community of 5-10 monks from Mt. Athos to serve as a core for the development of a spiritual life among our people in the traditional patterns. In enthusiasm over my note Θεόκλητος, who is editor of the periodical "Αγιορείτικη Βιβλιοθήκη" [Athonite Library] and has been writing the same for years and who has been waging a war against Ζωή, proceeded to publish everything I wrote him and a commentary on all the points I touched upon and whole heartedly agreed with me etc. The Archbishop was shown this article by the Άγιος Πρωτοσύγγελος Νεόφυτος (Holy Chancellor Neophytos] who also interpreted everything according to his own desires and misconceptions. Thereupon the Archbishop wrote me an extremely nasty letter accusing me of having εωσφορικήν αλαγονείαν, εγωίσμον and προβολήν του εαυτου μου [demonic pride, egoism and self-promotion] and claiming that I am ανατροπεύς [subversive] and not αφοσιωμένος είς τήν Ορθόδοξον πίστιν καί παράδοσιν [dedicated to the Orthodox faith and tradition]. Monday morning (May 4) I went to see him and after a ten minute interview he threw me out of his office in a very rehearsed manner. That was the first time I saw him since my trouble with Trembelas and he didn't even want to hear my version of the story, nor did he want to hear my reasons for being critical of Ζωή. I reminded him that I am not alone in my criticism of Ζωή and that many serious Orthodox theologians etc. are of the same opinion. But he was not in a state of mind to hear anything, and while I was leaving he demanded that I humiliate myself (να ταπεινωθης), whereupon I suggested that perhaps what he wanted of me is not humility, but servility (δουλοπρέπεια). Unfortunately he is such a complete δουλος [servant] to the image he has of Trembelas that he will not hear anything from anyone else. Unfortunately we modern Orthodox have completely lost the meaning of the distinction between heresy and Orthodoxy exactly because we have divorced theology from piety and try to become pious without the guide of Orthodox dogma, and therefore it has become possible for people with unconscious heretical presuppositions to set the pattern of our modern Church life, especially in this country. In this situation one is faced with so many problems. Is one just to sit back and allow the forgers of the Orthodox spirit to continue their work of corrupting our traditions, or must one wage a struggle to the end? Of course one must wage the struggle, but how and with whose help beside that of the Lord? The Orthodox today are not satisfied with the means of salvation given by God Himself and they try to invent new and more comfortable ways. Instead of accepting what God has done for them, they are telling God what He should have done, and are actually trying to do the work of God in a much better way, so they think, than God can do.

Excerpt From the Letter Dated May 28, 1958:

The Archbishop's attitude toward me is perhaps much different than you think. One of the many points I criticized Ζωή and Kotsonis for is their fervor in translating sentimental Protestant and Catholic religious novels and books on piety, which have no business being circulated among the Greeks in Greece. We have so many patristic works on piety to be translated and distributed, e.g. Φιλοκαλία [Philokalia], yet there is no interest whatsoever among Ζωή for such undertakings. Not only this but they actually sabotage any attempt in this direction because they are strongly anti-monastic and anti-ascetic. The Archbishop is also guilty of translating Western methods of piety. He recently finished publishing a book on prayer by a BOUNDS. [1] So you see his defense of Ζωή and Kotsonis is also perhaps primarily a defense of himself. There are other subjects also, such as kneeling on Sundays. The Archbishop tries to force me to kneel, but for me this is a matter of faithfulness to the patristic spirit. If we are to rule over many things we must be faithful over the few things (Matt. 25:23). Then the Archbishop is also deeply indebted to Trembelas who was the main instrument in his becoming bishop of Corinth during the Archbishopric of Chrysanthou of Athens. The ties are very deep between them and Trembelas can always count on cooperation. Then there is the question of things under the carpet and skeletons in the closet. Ζωή gets special cooperation from the bishops about whom they know special things from under the carpet and in the closet. The staunchest supporter of Ζωή is a bishop who when ordained many years ago had the Church packed with friends bearing arms in case anyone was tempted to say ανάξιος [unworthy]. This is why about seven Greek bishops would do anything for Trembelas, even when what is asked is unjust and beyond the dictates of reason. Karmiris once pointed out to me how Ζωή even uses the Sacrament of Confession to further its ends. You see, I am up against something much more serious than the momentary whims of an Archbishop.

At present in Greece I am the object of a strong whispering campaign being conducted by Ζωή. They are whispering that I am actually the heretic that Trembelas claims. A friend wrote me that ever since he quoted from my book his periodical has been banned for members of Ζωή. Yet they do not attack me in writing. They are content with the war of rumors and getting at me through the Archbishop....

In the whole controversy the traditionalists are tending to look for support to Mt. Athos and the Old Calendarists. My friend writes me of a possible alliance. There are more than a million Old Calendarists in Greece who are shamefully persecuted. Actually they are the true pious Orthodox in the traditional sense; they keep all the fasts and liturgical customs very faithfully. It is in their homes that one finds Φιλοκαλία and all the wonderful translations of the Fathers made in the last century. In most homes of pious of the official Church one finds Guardini, Oubaler, Holgner, Pascal, etc., but not one Father of the Church. Recently they are highly recommending Greek translations of Billy Graham's sermons. [2]

Notes:

1. E. M. Bounds, Power Through Prayer

2. This last paragraph explains the reasons why traditional Greek Orthodox have looked to schismatic groups such as the Old Calendarists for Orthodox literature dealing with traditional Orthodox life and thought. The negative influences of Zoe are the seed through which an extremist ecclesiology and paranoia entered the Church in the latter half of the twentieth century.
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Saint John the Hesychast


By St. Nikolai Velimirovich

John was a native of Nicopolis in Armenia and was the son of Encratius and Euphemia.

He was tonsured a monk at the age of eighteen and lived a strict and resolute life of asceticism, cleansing his heart by his many tears, fasting and prayer.

After ten years, he was appointed bishop of Colonia. By his example, he attracted his brother Pergamius and his uncle Theodore - both distinguished men at the imperial courts of Emperors Zeno and Justinian - to a God-pleasing life. Seeing the malice and intrigues of this world and his inability to put matters right, he abandoned his episcopal throne.

He disguised himself as a simple monk and went to the Monastery of St. Savva the Sanctified near Jerusalem. There he remained unknown for many years, conscientiously and capably completing every task that the abbot ordered him to do. For this, St. Savva recommended to Patriarch Elias that he ordain him a presbyter. When the patriarch wanted to ordain John, he confessed that he already possessed the rank of bishop. Then St. John closed himself in a cell and spent years and years in silence and prayer. Afterward he spent nine years in the wilderness feeding himself only on wild vegetables, and then he returned to the monastery.

He turned the faithful away from the heresy of Origen and contributed greatly to the condemnation and elimination of this heresy. He clearly discerned the spiritual world and healed people from sickness. Having conquered himself, he easily conquered demons.

Great in humility, might and divine wisdom, this servant of God entered peacefully into rest in the year 558 at the age of 104.

A Further Reflection

God hears the prayers of the righteous and fulfills them, sometimes immediately and completely, and at other times only later, at the appropriate time and according to the needs of the Church. In other words, in fulfilling the prayers of the righteous man, God has in mind either the man's salvation or the good of the whole Church.

St. John the Hesychast prayed to God to reveal to him how the soul separates from the body at death. While still at prayer, he was taken outside himself and had the following vision: A good man died in front of a church in Bethlehem, and angels took his soul from his body and carried it to heaven with sweet singing. Coming to himself out of his ecstasy, John immediately set out on the road from the Monastery of St. Savva the Sanctified to Bethlehem. When he reached Bethlehem, he saw the dead body of the man exactly as he had seen it in his vision.

When the great St. Savva the Sanctified died, John grieved and wept. Savva appeared to him in a vision and said: "Do not grieve, Father John, for even though I am separated from you in the body, nevertheless I am with you in the spirit." Then John begged him: "Father, pray to the Lord to take me with you." To this Savva replied: "For now, this cannot be. A great trial has yet to befall the Lavra, and God wants you to remain in the body to comfort and strengthen the faithful against the heretics." At first, John did not know what kind of heretics the holy father had spoken of, but he found out later, when the heresy of Origen began to shake the Church of God.

HYMN OF PRAISE: Saint John the Hesychast

John the Hesychast, God's laborer,
Walked through the wilderness as a lonely hermit,
Until someone cried out: "The barbarians are coming!
Behold how the dust rises up on the road!
They are near, very near; rise up, rise!"
"Let them be near, but God is nearer!"
John said to him, and did not move.
And when misfortune sought to overtake him,
A lion appeared, sent by God,
And began to fiercely roar at the enemy.
The horde fled; John did not move.
He competed with the severe wilderness,
He competed with her in stillness,
And in dryness and solitude.

"Pascha is coming, how shall we greet it?
What shall we eat on the feast, Father?"
The disciple asked. And John said to him:
"To every creature, God gives food."
When the Radiant Feast of Christ dawned,
An angel suddenly appeared as a man before the saint;
Bread, wine and honey he brought.
The disciple, when he beheld the miracle,
Wept at his lack of faith,
And glorified God and God's saint.

Apolytikion in the Plagal of the Fourth Tone
You are a guide of Orthodoxy, a teacher of piety and modesty, a luminary of the world, the God inspired pride of monastics. O wise John, you have enlightened everyone by your teachings. You are the harp of the Spirit. Intercede to Christ our God for the salvation of our souls.
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Saint Theodoulos the Stylite

St. Theodoulos the Eparch (Feast Day - December 3)


Saint Theodoulos was an eparch of Constantinople during the reign of Theodosius the Great (379-395).

After his wife's death, St Theodoulos gave his wealth of 550 litres of gold away to the poor and became a monk. He resigned his position because he did not want to be distracted by vain worldly cares. He traveled to Edessa and lived on top of a pillar for thirty years, eating nothing except once a week the Body and Blood of Christ together with the antidron.

At one point the thought came to him to wonder who lived a life of virtue equal to him. He received a divine answer when he heard a voice say that he was equal with Cornelius the Mime, who worked in a theatre in Damascus and bore the name Pandouros. Troubled by this he went to Damascus to search out Cornelius the Mime.

Finding him, Theodoulos fell at his feet and asked about his way of life. Cornelius responded that he was a sinner without any virtue. Insisting that he tell him, Theodoulos pleaded with him once again. Cornelius then responded that he was once a mime who travelled around with actors and dancers until he came to realize he was a great sinner. Being convicted by the Final Judgement he left everything to live a pure life and gave everything to the poor.

Not being satisfied with this, Theodoulos inquired of Cornelius to tell him more. Cornelius then told him how there was once a wealthy woman who married a certain man. Because the husband was a prodigal he spent his entire fortune as well as that of the woman. His debts eventually lead him into prison, and his wife did not have the money to have him fed. She would beg for money, but because she was beautiful there was great danger for her. It was then that Cornelius met her and found out her story. When he asked of her debt, she said it was 400 gold coins. Having only 230 gold coins, he went and sold what he could, even his best clothes, in order to raise the 400. Giving her the money, she was able to free her husband. Hearing this story Theodoulos glorified God and returned to mount his pillar satisfied.

St. Theodoulos the Stylite departed to the Lord around 440.

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The Greek Orthodox Mission in Tanzania


His Eminence Dimitrios Metropolitan of Irinopolis has done great missionary work in Tanzania, Africa over the past four years. He has lead the effort for the following:

- 16 churches have been built.

- 36 wells have been dug.

- 2 secondary schools, 3 primary schools and 1 pre-school have been constructed.

- The have constructed one orphanage, a clinic, a missionary guesthouse, a baptistry, an old age home, church bells, etc.

- Daily they feed 180 infants with milk and vitamin biscuits.

- They offer Vitamin C to 600 malnurished children and AIDS patients.

- 56 wheelchairs have been given to lepers and the disabled.

- There is a periodic distribution of food parcels and clothing, footwear, household items and medicines.

The documentary below was filmed during a visit by a missionary team from the Metropolis of Florina in Greece led by Chancellor of the Metropolis, Father Justin Bardaka. They are in Greek, but refer to the following website for some information in English: http://www.orthodoxytz.com/










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Noah’s Ark Theme Park Announced


December 2, 2010
MSNBC

A full-scale replica of Noah's Ark will be the biggest feature of a creationism-themed amusement park expected to open in 2014 in northern Kentucky, Gov. Steve Beshear announced Wednesday.

The $150 million park will be built by a for-profit group called Ark Encounter LLC, which is partnering with Answers in Genesis, most widely known for its high-tech Creation Museum in Petersburg, Ky., Beshear said at a Capitol news conference.

Site selection is not decided, he said, but the organizers have options on 800 acres in Grant County off Interstate 15, about 40 miles from the Creation Museum, which is outside Cincinnati, Ohio. The Ark Encounter website says the park will go in the Grant County site.

“Bringing new jobs to Kentucky is my top priority, and with the estimated 900 jobs this project will create, I am happy about the economic impact this project will have on the Northern Kentucky region,” Beshear said in a prepared statement.

The park is expected to draw 1.6 million visitors a year, Beshear said, citing a feasibility study by America’s Research Group.

In addition to the full-size ark, the complex will include a walled city, live animal shows, a children’s interactive play area, a replica of the Tower of Babel, a 500-seat special effects theater, an aviary, a journey through biblical history, and a first-century Middle Eastern village.

The story continues here. The official site of Ark Encounter is here. Answers in Genesis has issued a press release here. There are several images and video available here.
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Documentary: Constantinople Beneath Istanbul


"Cities of the Underworld: Istanbul" - 44 minutes, in English with Greek subtitles

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Thursday, December 2, 2010

The Prophetic Letter of Fr. John Romanides to Fr. Theoklitos Dionysiatis


Written in late 1957 or early 1958

Beloved brother in Christ Monk Theoklite,

I pray my letter finds you and our beloved Elder Gabriel [1] in physical and spiritual health and your Monastery fully in order.

I am very saddened that we will not be able to celebrate Pascha together this year. My mind is found to be constantly on the Holy Mountain and with every opportunity I try to enlighten my acquaintances about it. I emphatically believe that the revival of Orthodoxy will come only with the restoration of our monastic life. Precisely because the Church in the world is cut off from the monastic tradition, the collapse of spiritual life in our days is manifested. Satan has distorted so much the theology of the heretics and those supposed Orthodox influenced by the West, to the point where some think that salvation is not from the dominion and grasp of the enemy, but of God. God became man in order to save us from Himself!

Because of this the West has abandoned the ascetic life. They neither fast nor pray much. They only seek happiness. The manifestation of our monastic life does not benefit, as some think, the shortage of dedicated youth. There are many who devote themselves to the Church. However, because they have a distorted notion of salvation, predestination and sin, for this reason instead of going to Monasteries they go to "Zoe", [2] or they become monks of the world, that is worldly Archimandrites, and unfortunately today from these come our Bishops. When theology is false, then Christianity is reduced to activities.

Regarding the Ecclesiastical Theology of our current Theologians, the only proof that Orthodoxy hasn't died is the "Hellenic Christian Civilization" and the activities of "Zoe". "Zoe" is necessary for the Ecclesiastic Theology of Theologians who are inclined towards the West. For them the non-existence of "Zoe" is proof that Orthodoxy has completely lost its spirit. Now "Zoe" has begun to conquer territory here in America and will bear fruit, because all of life here is worldly activities and nothing more. The monastic life of the heterodox here is ripe with active orders and they engage in anything other than ascetic spirituality, as it has been received in the Orthodox Tradition. Therefore in this mold the "Zoe" movement fits in well.

Unfortunately we do not have one ascetic or monastery, and there is no living example of Orthodox life. Therefore, the pietism of "Zoe" conforms very much with the pietism of the heterodox, to the point where it will wreak havoc if ingrained.

I wanted to know your opinion about the possibility of establishing a monastic community of 5-10 monks in the land of America. If this does not happen, Orthodoxy will vanish here or will transform into something else, as it has already happened to a great degree.

I have tried in my book [3] to say these things which you also say in your book [4], but here nobody understands these things. You see, Greeks have assimilated with the happiness of the West and in their eyes happiness is the will of God. So why would he go to the top of the mountains and do vigils and so on?

I would like very much to correspond with you. [5] I believe the devil will be saddened that we do not like the Christianity he is promoting, but what's to be done? Nobody can be like him if they want to be like God. Saint Symeon the New Theologian beautifully describes how Satan assists in the prayers and good works of some.

With love in Christ,

+ J. Romanides

Read more about this letter at this link: Fr. John Romanides' Encounter With the Zoe Brotherhood

Notes:

1. Elder Gabriel Dionysiatis (1886-1983) was for forty years Abbot of the Holy Monastery of Dionysiou at Mount Athos.

2. The Greek semi-monastic Brotherhood of Zoe was founded in 1907 and based heavily on the writings of the excommunicated 19th century theologian Apostolos Makrakis together with devotional writings of the West. By the 1950's it had brought pietism as a normal way of life and thought within Greek Orthodoxy. See more at this link: http://orthodoxwiki.org/Brotherhood_of_Theologians_Zoe
.

3. "The Ancestral Sin", 1957.

4. "Between Heaven and Earth: Athonite Monasticism", 1956.

5. Elder Theoklitos Dionysiatis wrote of Fr. John Romanides in his book "Athonite Flowers" in 1962: "My good friend, the most pious Presbyter John Romanides, is not an ordinary theologian. He learned theology in two or three Universities and with the help of asceticism which illumined his soul. He knows four languages and is deeply educated. He is literally a monk, fed by the Holy Fathers and the holy liturgical life of the Orthodox Church, singing hymns to God 'seven times a day'."



Translation and Notes by John Sanidopoulos
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Bishop Atanasije Jevtic's Open Epistle to Artemije


Below is a very paraphrased open letter dated 1 December 2010 which Bishop Atanasije Jevtic wrote concerning his brother in Christ Artemije. I know this is sensitive material for some of my readers, but the truth must be revealed to prevent schism and avoid unfounded conspiracy theories against the Serbian hierarchy. The entire letter can be read here in Greek which was translated from Serbian. It is a bit too long for me to translate word for word right now.

Reminding the call of Christ to humility and repentance Bishop Atanasije reminds the faithful that Artemije was tonsured a monk 50 years ago by St. Justin the New ten days before he was tonsured by the same. Yet he has undermined the Holy Synod of Serbia and already created schism by "invading piratically two monasteries of the Diocese of Raska-Prizren and 'liturgized' there" even though he is no longer bishop and been restored as a monastic. Even though he claims to have served the Serbian Church for 50 years, it does not seem so in the past ten years. Instead of repenting before the Holy Synod, he calls upon the Holy Synod and the Patriarch to repent. Because he has not at one point come forward in repentance for his disobedience, Bishop Atanasije reminds Artemije of the words of Christ: "Physician, heal thyself".

50 years ago Artemije donned the rason of repentance, yet now he refuses it. Instead he chooses to call others to repentance. He could have saved himself from this situation by his own repentance and it would have been easier, yet he now chooses a more difficult path and has been reduced to a monk of repentance. All he had to do was come forward and say: "Open the gates of repentance, O Christ the Lifegiver."

Instead of confessing to his brother clergy and making an initial step to approach them, he now goes forward before the media and speaks with lawyers. He does not follow ecclesiastical law which has been instituted by Christ Himself in Matt. 18:15-17: “If your brother or sister sins, go and point out their fault, just between the two of you. If they listen to you, you have won them over. But if they will not listen, take one or two others along, so that ‘every matter may be established by the testimony of two or three witnesses.' If they still refuse to listen, tell it to the church; and if they refuse to listen even to the church, treat them as you would a pagan or a tax collector."

Brother Artemije has lied before God and men on the feast of the Archangels and the anniversary of his tonsure. He said that he was "unconstitutionally and improperly tried and there was no chance of apology, even as 'Roman law' requires" and that the indictment against him proves nothing. Interestingly this is the first time he has even spoken of the indictment of the Holy Synod.

Artemije, instead of following ecclesiastical law, follows so-called canonists and "wooden lawyers" around him saying that the canons teach something different, yet he doesn't want to listen to the 74th Apostolic Canon and the 19th Canon of Carthage which is in accordance with the teaching of Christ and prohibit the use of Roman law and secular courts for bishops.

Artemije called upon the Holy Synod to repent three times, and yet from February he has been mocking the new Patriarch making him look dumb and shamelessly telling lies. And he continues to lie, hiding the truth and facts of certain financial violations.

This mockery occurred in May of 2006 when Bishop Atanasije was a member of the Holy Synod. Partners of S. Vilovski, who started a lot of this mess and was harbored by Artemije, set up a shooting against the Registrar of the Province, Father Sergius Stankovic, his small children (daughters) and his wife, (the night of St. George's feast in 2006 Zvetsan, near Mitrovica), as Father Sergius is the in charge secretary of the diocese, and he had begun to reveal the financial and economic machinations of the then powerful wrongdoing on the Episcopal District of the same Artemije, Simeon Vilovski and his best man Predrag Suboticki.

When this horrible case was thoroughly examined, which is more a terrorist act for the history of the mafia rather than a part of ecclesiastical history, Artemije saw it as merely ironic. He said that Albanians fired those shots even though it was payed Serbs and his name is well-known: Dacic, a policeman from Kosovo Prilouzie. He was convicted to two years imprisonment, but escaped and is now hiding for fear of his arrest.

The Holy Synod unanimously asked Artemije to remove from his diocese in May of 2006 the mafia group РАДЕ НЕИМАР (the Vilovski brothers and their best man Predrag Suboticki) and to have Simeon Vilovski ecclesiastically judged. However Artemije denounced this decision and spoke ill of the Holy Synod and Patriarch Pavle, who at the time was very ill.

Committees were sent to Artemije, but he ignored them. Phone calls were made, but they were unanswered. On February 10th of this year he was removed from his Province and he signed the decision on February 13th, but he denied this on September 13th and October 13th saying he made a mistake. He said that he would not obey any decision by the Holy Synod, which is why one month later he was liturgizing.

The file with the evidence that the Third Committee came up with weighs tens of kilograms, and the decision of the Synod of the Hierarchy of May 2010 confirmed the Commission's findings and decisions of the Standing Holy Synod.

It must be said openly, because here lies the main topic: Artemis has large deposits in several Serbian (Komercijalna Banka) and Greek banks (National Bank, 11 Tsimiski Street, Thessaloniki), and these bank accounts mask the snake which is hiding under his feet.

So maybe he can tell us how much money is going to Kosovo and the poor and suffering there. How about he reimburse the Serbian Church for the one million euro debt he has left us from his diocese thanks to him and Vilovski.

Despite his monastic vow of poverty and landlessness and the charge of the Holy Synod to provide a written account of one's bank account, Artemije has said the unthinkable: "Perhaps the Synod does not know that it is violating the Constitution of the Republic of Serbia which guarantees personal property!" Yet according to the Holy Canons, a bishop is forbidden private property and ownership, even though Artemije's hypocrites say that the Canons do not say such a thing.

Artemije claims the ruling of the Holy Synod "is neither Constitutional, nor Canonical". By saying this he is putting himself above the Holy Synod who is ordained to guard the Orthodox faith and law. The Holy Synod is not "monks" by name only or demonstrators on the street with slogans that say "One is Truth: Bishop Artemije".

This self-proclaimed "martyr" and "bishop in exile" in his megalomania has claimed the decisions of the Holy Synod "have no meaning or power" over him. And then he claims to have not created a schism by saying "there is no schism"?

"I still am in unity with the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, as with the holy Apostles and holy Fathers" (newspaper "НОВОСТИ" 22/11/2010)! Obviously such a view and such a claim after his impeachment by the Synod of the Hierarchy (11.20.2010), demonstrates a profound intellectual error, the illusion of a tragic Bishop, now dreadful monk, who, without a trace of personal repentance, or a gospel and human conscience, continues to not repent before the Holy Synod in accordance with the 34th Apostolic Canon, which he has ignored. The Serbian Orthodox Church is visibly within our land; there is no invisible Protestant-like Church which Artemije imagines with his papal infallibility and sinlessness and invented ecclesiology, which he has over his 38 monks and some nuns.

Theodosios, the current Bishop of Raska, Prizren and Kosovo, just two years ago was ousted of Decani Monastery and the Province by Simeon and Artemije. He is now the canonical bishop of the Province and will meet the needs of the people and help restore the churches of the region destroyed by Albanians.
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St. Nikolai Velimirovich: On Near Death Experiences


By St. Nikolai Velimirovich

"Who has ever returned from the other world to inform us of it?" Thus the unbelievers ask.

One should reply to them: "Repent of your sins if you wish to find out; make yourselves worthy and you will see." St. Habakkuk traveled with an angel. St. Myrope saw a host of angels and among them the martyr, St. Isidore.

St. Athanasius of the Kiev Caves was dead to this world for two days and alive only in the other world. Upon the return of his soul to his body, they gathered around him and asked him: "How did you return to life? What did you see? What did you hear?" He would say nothing about it, being totally in horror at that which he had seen in the other world, and would only say: "Save yourselves!" When they pressured him to tell a little more of what he had seen in the other world after death, he replied: "Even if I should tell you, you would not believe me or listen to me." When they urged him yet further, however, he said among other things: "Repent every moment and pray to the Lord Jesus Christ and to His Most-pure Mother."

Even in our own time, there are cases of those who have temporarily died, and the visions and accounts of those who have returned to life in the body do not contradict but rather complement one another. For example, every person who dies sees one part of that other world that is vast and incomparably larger than this world. Many people, at death, see their long-dead relatives and speak with them. This is almost a common occurrence.

In 1926, in the village of Vevèani, Meletije P. was on his deathbed. He spoke with his children, who had died twenty years earlier. When his living relatives said to him, "You're rambling!" he replied, "I am not rambling, but rather I am speaking with them as I am speaking with you, and I see them as I see you."
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Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Movie: "The Fourth Wise Man" (1985)



You can read the classic tale by Henry Van Dyke in 1896 here.

IMDB Movie info here.

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Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos: "The Heavenly Citizen Card"


Below is an excerpt from a homily delivered by Metropolitan Hierotheos Vlachos of Nafpaktos in the Cathedral of Saint Andrew in Patras during the festal Divine Liturgy on November 30, 2010. In this part he specifically addresses the issue of the Citizen's Card which is scheduled to be implemented in Greece next month and has met with much protest among Greeks. The basis of the fear revolves around the question over whether or not this card bears the number 666 and thus be a prelude to the mark of the beast prophesied in the Book of Revelation. Some clergy and monastics have hyped up this fear, while others have tried to bring a more sober attitude towards the issue (see here and here). This has driven the Holy Synod of the Church of Greece to address this issue. Metropolitan Hierotheos, as one of the most respected hierarchs of the Church of Greece, gave his sober reflections amidst a crowd of thousands that deserves to be reflected upon by all Orthodox Christians. The entire sermon can be read here in Greek which mainly deals with the Apostle Andrew.

Christ told his disciples: "Fear not those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear Him who can destroy both soul and body in hell" (Matt. 10:28).

With this faith Saint Andrew defied death and became a heavenly man, fearless in Christ. The Apostle Paul explained this situation when he wrote: "For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord" (Rom. 8:38-39). He had Christ within him and was not overcome by any fear.

In a wonderful passage from the second century Epistle of Diognetus this faith is spoken of among the Christians: "As citizens, they share in all things with others, and yet endure all things as if foreigners. Every foreign land is to them as their native country, and every land of their birth as a land of strangers." For "our citizenship is in heaven" (Phil. 3:10).

And this occurs because, again according to the Epistle of Diognetus: "They pass their days on earth, but they are citizens of heaven. They obey the prescribed laws, and at the same time surpass the laws by their lives."

It is extremely amazing what Saint John Chrysostom says, that Christians are not simply "citizens" of this world, but "sojourners" towards the heavenly city. He writes: "Do not say 'I have this city' or 'that city'. No one has a city. Our city is a heavenly city." In reality, therefore, we are "sojourners" towards the heavenly city. This is in agreement with what Saint Paul says: "For here we have no lasting city, but we seek the city that is to come" (Heb. 13:14). We are "heavenly sojourners" and "heavenly citizens".

However, we contemporary Christians, the younger siblings of such great saints and ecumenical teachers, unless we have saints such as Saint Andrew, we live in great poverty, we are fearful, we fear every small enemy, even our own shadow. We are imprisoned in our selfishness, locked up in the narrow cells of ourselves, we are possessed by insecurity.

We fear our neighbor, for we consider every man a threat. We fear the Devil and the Antichrist, something which did not occur with the saints. For whoever unites himself with Christ and loves his brothers and sisters cannot fear anyone, since according to John the Evangelist: "Perfect love casts out fear" (1 Jn. 4:18).

A characteristic saying of a certain writer speaks of the anxiety of modern man which he compares with Photios Kontoglou, the well-known Christian artist, who was inspired by the love of God. He writes:

"You cross the road and see thousands of people and say: 'This road is a walking cemetery. All these people died or will die. Like the sheep, like the birds, at one moment they tread upon the dust and the sidewalks, and the next moment they will be lost, as if they had never existed.' And suddenly you see someone and you shake with joy. You say: 'This one will not die. This one has a soul. He captures matter and turns it into spirit. He was given a little fleeting life and he makes it immortal. His eyes shine and his hands are full of eagerness and power. And when he is overwhelmed by bitterness, he begins to chant a troparion: 'To thee the Champion Leader...' ('Τη υπερμάχω στρατηγώ τα νικητήρια...') or 'Let all mortal flesh be silent...' ('Σιγησάτω πάσα σαρξ βροτεία...'). And the bitterness is exorcised and the earth shifts and Kontoglou, with his curly hair and large eyes, enters whole into Paradise.'"

This is how saints live, without fear, without insecurity, but with the power and fullness of life. In this manner they face the difficulties of life, and in this manner they face courageously the fear of death.

My beloved,

Many of us are asking regarding the citizen card which is underway. Of course, the Holy Synod is already engaged with this issue. The selected members of the Standing Holy Synod, some of whom are present today in this solemn Divine Liturgy, have a deep sense of responsibility, possess an ecclesiastical phronema and Orthodox conscience, and will decide on this issue responsibly and seriously. And we must have trust in the Holy Synod; we are not "sheep without shepherds" (Matt. 9:36).

What is urgently needed, however, is to receive the "heavenly citizen card". The saints, such as Saint Andrew, journeyed along the path towards the heavenly city, surpassing all the difficulties in their lives, and even faced, with the power of the Holy Spirit, the iron hand of the Roman Empire which had pagan symbols of worship and worshipped the emperor as a god. The saints received the heavenly citizen card and were citizen's of heaven.

And we must imitate them. This means that we must unite ourselves with Christ, to set the name of Christ in our hearts, in agreement with the words of Revelation: "Then I looked, and there before me was the Lamb, standing on Mount Zion, and with him 144,000 who had his name and his Father’s name written on their foreheads" (Rev. 14:1).

This name of the Lamb and of the Father on the forehead of the faithful Christian means, according to Arethas of Caesarea: "They are branded with the divine light of His divine face...." Then will come to pass the words of the Evangelist John: "You, dear children, are from God and have overcome them, because the one who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world" (1 Jn. 4:4).

Living this life in Christ within the Church, we will not fear anyone, we will be free in Christ, we will journey from selfishness to divine love and philanthropy, and the small area in which we live will open to become universal and we will be heavenly citizens. We will not be tortured by this "present city", with all its depressing phenomena, but we will be inspired by the "future city" (Heb. 13:14) "whose architect and builder is God" (Heb. 11:10).

Translated by John Sanidopoulos

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The Nativity Fast


By Fr. Lawrence Barriger

In recent years there has been a renewed emphasis on the cycle of the liturgical year. The traditions of an earlier age are being presented to the contemporary membership of our churches in an attempt to bring a spiritual element to the cycle of daily life, which has become so secularized.

One of the most important seasons to be re-discovered has been the season of Advent, the fast before the celebration of Christmas. Advent, the Western name of this fast period, comes from the Latin verb "advenire" meaning "to reach" or "to arrive at." Advent is the preparation for the arrival of the Messiah in the birth of the Christ Child.

Among Western Christians the Advent season begins on the fourth Sunday before Christmas and ends on Christmas Eve. The four candles of the Advent wreath represent the four Sundays of Advent. Advent also marks, for Western Christians, the beginning of the Church year.

The season of Advent, or as it is most often referred to in the Orthodox Liturgical books, the Nativity Fast, begins in the Orthodox Church on the day after the Feast of the Apostle Philip, November 15th (November 28th). In fact, it was popularly referred to by Carpatho-Rusins as Philipovka, that is "Philip's Fast."

According to legend, St. Philip the Apostle called down the wrath of God upon those who were torturing him to death. As a penance for presuming on the vengeance of God, it was revealed to him by an angel that he would not enter paradise until forty days after his death. Philip then sent word to the other living Apostles and begged them to fast for forty days after his death. The Canons attributed to St. John the Faster, the sixth century Patriarch of Constantinople, do in fact refer to this fast as the fast of St. Philip.

While it is entirely possible that this fast began as a popular custom not necessarily associated with Christmas, it is more likely that the forty day fast grew out of an attempt to imitate the fast of Great Lent preceding Pascha. Although it was only in the fourth century that the Feast of the Nativity of Christ was celebrated by itself on December 25th, from its inception it was seen as a feast only rivaled by the Resurrection. The celebration of the Incarnation of the Word of God provided an excellent forum for the Churchmen of the late fourth and early fifth centuries to attack the then rampant heresies of Arianism (denial that Jesus, as the "Word" of God, was of one essence with God the Father) and Monophysitism (denial of the effective presence of the human nature in Christ).

The Advent Fast, just as with the Lenten fast, developed from popular piety reflecting on the Scriptural fasts. However, unlike the Lenten fast, which was soon regulated by the Church in terms of its severity and duration, the Advent fast's severity and duration were for many centuries governed by local custom and tradition. It was not until 1166 that a church council meeting in Constantinople fixed the length of the fast at forty days. However, the famous Canonist and Patriarch, Theodore Balsamon of the Great Church of Constantinople (1185-1204), noted in interpreting this council that only monastics were obligated to keep the forty days and that lay people might shorten it to only seven days.

It is interesting to note that unlike Great Lent, with its Canon of St. Andrew of Crete, Presanctified Liturgies and Lenten Triodion, the liturgical life of the Church scarcely notices the existence of Advent. The Sundays are observed as "Sundays after Pentecost" and there are no special services prescribed. The approach of Christmas is mentioned only on the two Sundays directly preceding it, although the Christmas Canon (Christ is Born, glorify him...) is sung as a refrain at the Matins for the Presentation of the Mother of God on November 21st (December 4th) and also on St. Nicholas Day on December 6th (December 19th).

One of the perpetual questions that is always asked at this time of year is, "when is it proper to sing Christmas Carols or decorate for Christmas." Unlike the Fast of Lent, which is really a preparation for Holy Week, the Nativity Fast is one of joyful expectation. As mentioned above, the Church begins to sing "Christ is born, glorify Him!" already on November 21st (December 4th). There is nothing wrong or inappropriate about decorating or singing the traditional Kol'jady after the fourth of December (or November 21st on the New Calendar). Unfortunately, since Matins has been discontinued in many of our churches, this refrain is no longer heard. This fact, coupled with the feeling in many "Old Calendar" parishes that to decorate the Church or to sing the Kol'jady before Christmas Eve will somehow mean that the Calendar is being changed, often leads to the practice of refusing to do anything that pertains to the Nativity until after December 25th.

Besides singing the Christmas Canon at Matins, the Kontakion of the Preparation for the Nativity is to be sung on the Sunday after the Feast of the Presentation of the Mother of God and to continue through the Advent season until the Nativity. In some parishes the custom still exists of having either Paraklises or other devotions to the Mother of God during the Advent season. However, these are considered "paraliturgical" services that are celebrated out of piety. They are not formally prescribed by the Church.

The tremendous influence of monasticism after the fall of Constantinople in 1204, certainly contributed to the observance of the forty-day Nativity Fast by all Orthodox Christians, whether they were monastics or not. In light of the gross materialism of the secular Advent - the Christmas shopping season - the season of Advent has a valuable place in our spiritual lives. Through this season's emphasis on prayer, fasting and charity, the spiritual reality of Christ's Incarnation is brought to bear on our daily lives, thereby preparing us to welcome the Messiah into our hearts at time of His Advent.

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Elder Paisios, the Apostle Andrew and Patras


On 14 July 1993, chaos came over the city of Patras when an afternoon earthquake struck and shook up people's lives.

During the earthquake Elder Paisios had a vision on Mount Athos, as he was laying on a bed of suffering one year prior to his death. He saw the Apostle Andrew, the protector and patron of the city of Patras, praying intensely and with tears to our Lord Jesus Christ, saying: "Save my city, save my city."

Immediately Elder Paisios contacted Metropolitan Nikodemos of Patras, who informed his suffering flock and reminded them of their protector.

It is believed for this reason Patras was saved from any major catastrophe.

See also: The Patras earthquake (14 July 1993): relative roles of source, path and site effects

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Apostle Andrew Relics Settle in Kazakhstan


November 30, 2010
RIA Novosti

Today the Russian Orthodox Dormition Cathedral in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, received a priceless gift from the Vatican, the relics of the apostle St. Andrew the First-Called. This Christian relic has been brought to the republic a few times in the past, but this time it is here to stay. This event is even more symbolic because the 30th of November is the saint’s remembrance day in the Russian Orthodox Church.

According to legend, St. Andrew the First-Called was one of Jesus Christ’s first and most devoted disciples. Russian manuscripts describe him as a Christian missionary in Ancient Russia. The apostle was also considered the patron saint of Russia and Scotland. Legends say that the apostle, like Jesus Christ, was a martyr for his faith, he was crucified by Greek pagans on a diagonal cross which was later called the cross of St. Andrew. At present, the Apostle Andrew is venerated by both the Catholic and the Russian Orthodox Church. In Russia, one of the highest state awards bears his name, the Order of St. Andrew the First-Called. Incidentally, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev has been awarded this Order.

The Apostle Andrew’s relics were kept in the Italian city of Amalfi for many years and the issue of taking part of them to a cathedral in Kazakhstan has been debated for a long time. Pope Benedict XVI took this decision due to the fact that a diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church was formed in Kazakhstan in 2010. The donation of the Apostle Andrew’s reliquary became a special gift of the Catholic Church to the newly-formed diocese.

The priceless gift is also referred to as a sign of developing the interconfessional dialogue and mutual understanding between the two Christian Churches. Many experts believe that the donation of the relics can become an important step towards a meeting of the heads of the Roman Catholic and the Russian Orthodox Church, very much looked forward to in the world. However, the Moscow Patriarchate, while not denying the possibility of such a meeting some time in the future, prefers not to rush the events. Ilarion, the Metropolitan of Volokolamsk and the head of the Department of international religious ties of the Russian Orthodox Church, says the following:

“Every day brings us closer to the meeting of the Pope and the Patriarch. We do not know when it will happen and we are not preparing for it. The work we are doing today in order to improve our relations with the Catholic Church is aimed at improving the general atmosphere of our relations and at achieving a higher level of mutual understanding. Transfer of any saints’ relics, undoubtedly, favours better relations between our Churches."

From now on, the priceless Christian relic will be kept in the Dormition Cathedral in Astana. This cathedral is one of the largest and newest churches of the young capital of Kazakhstan and of the whole republic. It has an area of over two thousand square metres and is 68 metres high. It is the first large Orthodox church built in Central Asia for the last decade. Up to 4 thousand people can pray in the cathedral simultaneously. The cathedral was consecrated by the head of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill in January 2010 when the Patriarch paid a pastoral visit to Kazakhstan.
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Orphanage In Turkey Returned To Ecumenical Patriarchate


November 29, 2010
Associated Press

Turkey complied with a European Court of Human Rights ruling on Monday and returned a 19th-century orphanage to the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul, the center of Orthodox Christianity around the world.

The move is likely to appease the European Union which also calls on the Turkish government to reopen a Greek Orthodox seminary and return dozens of other properties such as school buildings and churches seized from Jewish and Christian foundations decades ago.

"It is an important development to show respect for law, democracy and minorities," said Cem Murat Sofuoglu, an attorney for the patriarchate, after receiving the title deed. "A right has been taken back."


Turkey took control of the 19th-century building in 1997, many years after it was abandoned, on the grounds that it belonged to another foundation and had fallen into disuse.

The Patriarchate, however, said the government had refused to issued the necessary permits for the maintenance and repair of the structure, one of the largest wooden buildings in the world.

The European court ruled in June that the land was registered to the patriarchate, giving it de facto legal status to the building.

Turkey is also under pressure to reopen a theology school on an island outside Istanbul that trained generations of church leaders, including Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, until it was closed by Turkey in 1971. The official argument for the seminary's closure is that a religious institution without government oversight is not compatible with the secular institutions of Turkey, a country where all Muslim clerics are trained and paid by the government.


The patriarchate says Ankara refuses to open the seminary because it wants to prevent the church from raising new leaders. The church's leader has to be a Turkish citizen, which makes it difficult for the dwindling Greek community of several thousand to produce any candidates.

But in a move to address that problem, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's government recently granted Turkish citizenship to 12 senior clerics at the Ecumenical Patriarchate, so that they could succeed the 70-year-old Bartholomew.

The patriarchate in Istanbul dates from the Orthodox Greek Byzantine Empire, which collapsed when the Muslim Ottoman Turks conquered the city in 1453.
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Tuesday, November 30, 2010

A Great Miracle of the Apostle Andrew in Cyprus in 1912


The Holy Monastery of the Apostle Andrew in Karpasia, Cyprus, which is presently in the occupied area of Cyprus under the Turks, has an unknown history. According to tradition, it was here where the ship of the Apostle Andrew was in a lull for three days. It was also here where the Apostle struck a rock to create a source of water, which runs from the old church where the holy water flows near the sea. This holy water healed the blind son of the captain of the ship, who, according to tradition, later built the first church here dedicated to the first-called disciple of Christ, Andrew.


However, what made this monastery famous to every Cypriot was the following miracle:

During the abbacy of Economou Christophorou Kykkotis a wonderful event happened which moved the residents of Cyprus and increased respect and love for the Apostle Andrew and his monastery.

Around 1896 certain Turks in the city of Allagia, Asia Minor kidnapped the only son of a poor Greek woman named Maria. Despite her efforts to restore her 13 year-old son, this became unfortunately impossible.

Little Pentelis Hatzigeorgis was taken by his kidnappers to military schools to serve in the Islamic battalions, and after graduation would enter into service of the Sultan and Muhammad.

The mother of the child placed her hope in God and prayed daily for His mercy and the restoration of her child. Many years passed, it was 1912, and Maria saw in her dreams a certain man named Andrew, and he announced to her that she would soon see her son. Maria believed that her visitor was none other than the first-called disciple of Christ Himself. She immediately boarded an Austrian steamer which was going from Smyrna to Larnaka in order to venerate the Apostle Andrew at his monastery in Cyprus.

On this same ship were many Cypriots, men and women, who were working in Mersina and Adana for an official German company that manufactured large rail projects in the East. Also aboard were a small group of dervishes, who were visiting Cyprus to attend a pending issue regarding one of their Tekke's on the island. To certain women on the ship Maria expressed her deep conviction that with the help of Saint Andrew she would get back her son.

One of the dervishes overheard the woman with great interest and observed her. Eventually the young man approached Maria. He asked Maria how she would identify her lost son, so she told him of the peculiar pair of birthmarks that he bore on his shoulder and chest. The young man then threw off his woolen cloak to expose the same marks and fell on his knees before his mother. Despite the many years of separation and Turkish education, Pentelis remembered his childhood.

He then removed the hat from his head, dressed in Greek clothes and confessed his Orthodox Christian faith. The joy of both mother and son, together with the other Christians traveling with them, was great and very moving. Immediately when the ship docked in Larnaka, both mother and son ran to the Church of Saint Lazarus, where they prayed fervently and thanked the Apostle Andrew. Approaching the priest of the church, Fr. John Makoulis, he confessed once again his faith in the Holy Trinity. Fr. John then chrismated him to return him officially once again to the Orthodox Christian faith.

They then visited the Monastery of Saint Andrew where they venerated Saint Andrew and once again thanked him for the deliverance of Pentelis and the answered prayers of Maria. From there they went to Kykkos Monastery where they stayed for a few days.

Within months of this event, the shrine received a stream of pilgrims which increased into a flood as the saint proved his power over a random pilgrimage of supplicants, Greeks as well as Turks, sophisticated Athenians as well as local peasants.


Read this Cypriot folktale based on this miracle.

Below is a beautiful Cypriot song dedicated to this miracle:



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The Skete of Saint Andrew in Karyes, Mount Athos


The Skete of Saint Andrew in Karyes of Mount Athos is also know as Serai and stands where the old Monastery of Xistrou once stood. Previously known as the Cell of Saint Anthony, it was built by Russian monastics in 1842 at the sponsorship of the Russian Tsar. In 1849 the Ecumenical Patriarchate recognized it as the Skete of Saint Andrew. Patriarch Joachim III of Constantinople consecrated the church in 1900 and it is one of the largest churches in the Balkans and the largest on Mount Athos. It is a dependancy of Vatopaidi Monastery and housed 800 monastics before World War 1; today there are about 20 monks. The Skete houses a portion of the skull of Saint Andrew. The Athonias Academy is in this Skete.

See photos here.







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Christianity in Egypt Started 200 Years Earlier Than Thought


Of course, this information is nothing new to Orthodox Christians, but it is interesting nonetheless.

November 30, 2010
ANI

Brigham Young University researchers have unearthed evidence that proves Christianity in Egypt started two centuries earlier than previously believed.

The researchers were digging on the edge of the Fayum oasis south of Cairo, in a spot called Fag el-Gamous, or Way of the Water Buffalo, when they stumbled upon the find.

The Bible says Joseph and Mary fled to Egypt for a time with the baby Jesus to escape Herod's henchmen, and about 50 years later, St. Mark supposedly established a church in Alexandria.

But according to scholars, Christianity didn't take root in the Land of the Pyramids for another three centuries.

Now BYU diggers have found a necropolis in which the dead were buried in layers of graves, leaving a record of how burial practices changed between 350 B.C. and A.D. 500.

Archaeologist C. Wilfred Griggs and his colleagues burrowed into the cemetery and documented shifts in burials that he believes point to early Christian influences.

"All the burials we encountered were 'head east' burials, but, when we got to the bottom of the shaft, we found them 'head west'," the Salt Lake Tribune quoted Griggs, a BYU professor of ancient scripture who has led the university's Egypt excavations since 1981, as saying.

"What happened? Did someone miss the program? I became aware we had a pattern here.

"Right around the end of the first century, the burial started changing. Was there a mass migration or revolution? It probably resulted from a change of religion, and the only change of religion was the arrival of Christianity," he stated.

BYU crews have located 1,700 graves, which yielded numerous artifacts that Griggs suspects are the oldest-known pieces of Christian iconography in the form of crosses, fish and figurines.

His theories could upend, or at least complicate, accepted ideas for how Christianity spread through Egypt during the first centuries after Jesus' crucifixion.

"If it's true, that would be interesting, but I would be cautious," warns Francois Gaudard, a researcher at the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute who specializes in Coptic studies.

While his ideas have generated scepticism, Griggs says no one has offered an alternate interpretation of the Fag el-Gamous finds.

David Whitchurch, another professor of ancient scripture involved with BYU's dig, said a person buried with the head to the west would rise facing east, the direction from which the Christian Messiah is supposed to approach on Judgment Day.

On the other hand, a person buried head east would rise facing west, a direction ancient Egyptians associated with death.

"Something is going on here, there is no question. We know Christianity spread to Egypt. How far it spread and how early is open to question," Whitchurch added.

For more details on this find, read: BYU Diggers Rewriting History in Egypt

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Video and Photos: Saint Andrew Cathedral in Patras


At the location of the Apostle Andrew's martyrdom in Patras, Greece are two churches. The older church is built over the actual spot of his martyrdom and was founded as seen today between 1836 and 1843. Inside is the marble tomb of the Apostle Andrew in which his relics were placed, though in the 4th century his relics were transferred to Constantinople by Emperor Constantius and eventually ended up in Rome. On 26 September 1964 the Vatican returned the skull of the Apostle Andrew together with a finger to the people of Patras as a gesture of ecumenical good will. The newer more majestic church was built in a more Roman/Byzantine style and was initially founded in 1908 by King George I and dedicated in 1974 by Metropolitan Nikodemos of Patras. The latter is the largest Orthodox church in the Balkans and one of the largest in all of Europe. The central dome is 46 meters in height on top of which is a Cross made of pure gold surrounded with 12 other Crosses in honor of the twelve disciples. The new church can hold 5,500 people.

Next to the older church is the well and cave of the Apostle Andrew. This well at first was dedicated to Demeter, but now contains Holy Water sanctified by the Apostle. It was here that Saint Andrew would preach and it was inside this cave in which the original X-shaped cross of the Apostle Andrew was later found.

The videos below were shot by my sister Vaso, and also feature my niece Christiana and parents Panagiotis and Panagiota. In the first video are inside shots of the newer church during a Divine Liturgy in the summer of 2009. It features shots of the skull and X-shaped cross being venerated by the faithful. The second video has my family walking from the new church, passed the old church (which was closed), to the well and cave of St. Andrew. My father narrates some of his memories, since he was born and raised in Patras and was present at the joyous parade of 26 September 1964 when the relics of St. Andrew were returned. The photos are mainly personal photos owned by me.

Read also: The Translation of the Precious Skull of the First-Called Apostle Andrew




















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