Month: December 2007

  •  ~Our Year in Review 2007~
    January
     
    New Year’s Day, the Feast of St. Basil – Cutting of the Vasilopita
     
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    Jonah turns 6
     
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    Epiphany- The Blessing of the Waters
     
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    Bishop Savas’ visit to Cincinnati
     
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    February

    Jonah, Nicholas and Basil , sledding down the hill at our old house
     
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    Visiting our new Church and a frozen Niagara Falls
     
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    March
     
    Saying goodbye to Middletown, Ohio- Fr’s last service at our old Church
     
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    Springtime fun at Yiayia and Papou’s house- The kids and I lived with my parents until June, when we joined Fr. in NY.

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    Jonah’s Second Frontgate Shoot- he was first in the catalog last Christmas
     
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    April
     
    Basil and Nicholas’ Spring Piano Recital
     
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    Maria~Angelica goes for a long walk and the neighborhood children join her!
     
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    May
     
    Nicholas and Basil – Mars Hill Fine Arts Night
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    Maria~Angelica- enjoying the refreshments!
     
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    Saying goodbye to Baba’ as he heads back to NY
     
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    Nicholas and me at the 1st grade Mothers Day Tea- Mars Hill Academy
     
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      Third grade Roman Day, Basil presenting his Time Line of the Roman Empire during the time of Christ

    Basil Roman Timeline

    June
     
    Last Day of  School at Mars Hill Academy- Jonah and me at his class party,  my best friends, their children and Nicholas and Dean at Field Day
     
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    Greek School Picnic- NY
     
    Vacation Bible School at our new Church
     
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    Celebrating my birthday at Niagara Falls
     
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    July
     
    The boys enjoying the lake
     
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    Parish House Renovations get underway
     
    Before and during

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    August
     
    Connie and Dean’s Visit- The boys on the Skywheel at Niagara Falls
     
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    St. Timothy’s Camp
     
     
    Basil on the zip line
     
     
    Nicholas and Jonah around the campfire
     
    Nouna Sandra and Thea Voula’s Visit to NY
     
     
    Niagara-on-the lake
     
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    Receiving Holy Communion with Nouna
     
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    Cave of the Winds

    September

    Jonah’s first day of School

    Apartment living

       

    Maria~Angelica’s closet bedroom- she spent 4 months there- now there is an easy going baby!
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    Nicholas celebrating his 8th birthday at the apartment and out to dinner

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    Nicholas Celebrating his birthday at Rivendell

     

    Basil turns 10

    Basil 10 years old- Niagara Falls

    October
     
    Enjoying Marine Land- Canada
     
     
     
    The parish house- with fresh landscaping due to the kindness Mr. E. from church and the ladies’ Philopotochos
     
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    The kids in their new rooms
     
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    A tasty house warming present
     
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    Yiayia and Papou visit
     
    Maria~Angelica and Papou walking into church
     
     
    Church dinner dance
     
     
    Maria~Angelica turns 2!!
     
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      Trick or Treat

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    November

    Visiting Cincinnati- kids in trees and a children’s concert at Music Hall

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    Playing in Yiayia and Papou’s hammock

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    Thanksgiving lunch at Church for those in need
     
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    The boys working on a map project
     
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    December
     
    The Nutcracker Ballet
     
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    Friends visit from back home
     
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    St. Nicholas Day Celebration- Nicholas’ Name Day
     
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    Christmas 2007

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    Basil, Nicholas and Jonah altar boys Christmas 2007
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    *2005 and 2006 in Review

  • Christ is Born! Glorify Him!

    Nativity of Christ

    “Fear not for behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior; which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you: You shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger” (Luke 2:11-12).

    Hymns of the Feast

    Your birth, O Christ our God, dawned the light of knowledge upon the earth. For by Your birth those who adored stars, were taught by a star, to worship You, the Sun of Justice and to know You, Orient from on High. O Lord, glory to You.

    Today, the Virgin bears Him who is transcendent, and the earth presents the cave to Him who is beyond reach. Angels, along with shepherds glorify Him. The Magi make their way to Him by a star. For a new child has been born for us, the God before all ages.

    Καλα Χριστουγεννα!

    Merry Christmas Everyone!

  •   ~Nativity Festivities 2007~

    Greek School Christmas Program

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    Jonah’s class singing the traditional Kalanda and  Jonah on triangle.

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    And they say, “Santa’s not real!” I was really surprised the boys went up there. They must of known Santa was passing out Target gift cards! That was very nice of the Greek school!

    Basil, Nicholas and Jonah altar boys Christmas 2007

    Basil, Jonah and Nicholas during the Sunday Divine Liturgy- The Great Entrance.

    ~The Nativity Play~

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    Basil in the Nativity play, as a shephard, Nicholas  and Jonah are angels

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    And there are my little angels now, receiving antidoron from their father

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  • ~My dear friend becomes an Orthodox Monastic, Glory be to God~

    Dear Parish Faithful & Friends in Christ,
     
    It was a deeply-felt joy to be present and to participate in the tonsuring of Sister Vicki as a rassophore nun on the Feast Day of St. Herman of Alaska (December 13).  This took place in the chapel of at the Monastery of the Transfiguration in Ellwood City, PA, the home of Sister Vicki’s new monastic community.  Sister Vicki spent over twenty years as a teacher, and then made the life-changing decision to test her possible monastic vocation in 2002.  She then returned home briefly to distribute her earthly goods before returning permanently to the monastery in the Fall of 2003.  And now she is committed to being an Orthodox nun!   It is always a great blessing for any given  parish community when a priest or monastic emerges from its enclosure to pursue one of these worthy vocations within the life of the Church.  We are now assured that Sister Vicki and perhaps the entire sisterhood is holding up our community before God in prayer on a daily basis.  We also have a place of pilgrimage brought much more readily to our attention with one of our former parishioners and close friends in residence there. And we now have a living example of someone who has freely chosen to follow Christ with a love and intensity that is so lacking in our contemporary world.  I am not quite sure how to put it, but for me it is deeply satisfying, as a parish priest, that a monastic has come forth from our parish community, and that however modest my contribution, I was a small part of that process.  Having said that, I will also admit to missing Sister Vicki’s presence among us!   Her commitment, encouragement, obedience and love for Christ were always in clear evidence through her helpfulness here when she was a parishioner for a little over ten years.
     
    There were three of us present for her tonsuring, for Dan Georgescu – our driver – and Shirley Leara were part of our parish delegation to the monastery.  It is about a five – six hour trip to the monastery.  When we first arrived, the air was crisp and the sky clear, as Shirley pointed out the lovely spectacle of a vast and starry sky made a bit  brighter in the darker rural setting of the monastery.   We went straight to the church for we arrived as the Vigil for St. Herman was being served.  Splendid as the evening was, it was wonderful to enter the warmly inviting atmosphere of the monastery chapel.  With its many beautiful ceiling frescoes, seasonal vestments and colors, softly-burning candles, and the reverent singing and chanting of the nuns, all expressing the presence of God, the church as the ark of salvation and true home of the believer was vividly apparent to us. The well-known theologian and author, Protopresbyter Thomas Hopko, was the celebrant, as he retired to a home near the monastery and now serves in the chapel on a regular basis.  We were in time for the anointing and distribution of blessed bread during the chanting of the Canon prescribed for Matins.  Following the service, we were able to chat briefly with Sister Vicki and the other mothers and sisters of the community. 
     
    The Feast of St. Herman beginning the next morning was most splendid.  We began with the chanting of a superb akathist hymn in honor of St. Herman’s “great deeds” in North America, followed by the third and sixth hours and then the tonsuring of Sister Vicki.  This relatively short rite included the chanting of appropriate psalms by Sister Vicki; a prayer for her new status as a rassophore nun; the “tonsuring,” or cutting, of some of her hair, symbolic of offering her whole life up to God in repentance and service; and her clothing in some more of the monastic clothing as this has developed over the centuries.  In addition to her black monastic rassa, Sister Vicki now wears a new headpiece with veil, a pleated mantia (when she reads the Scriptures in the Liturgy), and an elaborately tied scarf that covers her head and shoulders peculiar to Romanian Orthodox monasticism.  Sister Vicki was “clothed” by Mother Christophora, the abbess of the monastery.  The service was performed by Fr. Alexander Culter, the igumen of St. John the Evangelist Monastery in Hiram, OH, and now Sister Vicki’s spiritual father.  Only a hieromonk, or monk-priest, may serve at the tonsuring of another monastic.  When Fr. Alexander read aloud a final admonition to her about obedience in all things to her abbess, and the need for humility and self-sacrifice, I leaned over to Fr. Tom and whispered:  “That’s rough.”  He responded:  “Yes, but that’s the Gospel!”  The Divine Liturgy then followed, with three of us concelebrating.   
     
    Asked to speak a few words in honor of Sister Vicki’s tonsuring, I began by sending the heartfelt greetings and best wishes from the parish as a whole.  I told everyone present that it probably would not come as a surprise if I further mentioned that Sister Vicki was like my “right arm” while a parishioner at Christ the Savior/Holy Spirit – totally committed, quietly zealous, obedient, encouraging and helpful.  And that, as much as I rejoice in her new-found vocation, it was initially disorienting, as “losing” her was something like having my right arm severed!  But we continue to remain very close and I am sure that that will continue for the years to come.  I was struck by the peacefulness and serenity that was clearly present in Sister Vicki.  This was most obvious, of course, in her face, which had a certain inner glow about it.  This has always been true to some extent in Sister Vicki, but it has evidently been enhanced  and even magnified in her new monastic life.  I shared this with Fr. Tom, who responded by saying that Sister Vicki has been a most welcome addition to the community;that she is always quietly on the move and doing her work; and that she is somehow just “there” at all times.  Sister Vicki has found God and her earthly vocation – a dual gift that sadly eludes many, many people. 
     
    A warm meal was shared by everyone in the trapeza following the Liturgy.  Truly a feast, for we had shrimp in honor of St. Herman!  Shirley presented Sister Vicki with some practical gifts for daily life, and I presented  Mother Christophora with a check in honor of Sister Vicki’s tonsuring from the parish.  After a visit to the enticing monastery gift shop we left for home, having spent an extensively short, but intensively filled, amount of time at the Monastery of the Holy Transfiguration.  Dan made the trip home thoroughly enjoyable by sharing with us from his impressive CD collection of Orthodox hymnography from a variety of traditions. 
     
    When, in the providential will of God, Sister Vicki is tonsured further into the monastic life with the taking of the distinctively monastic vows, in a more elaborate and fuller service, I am hoping that we will be able to make the trip with yet a larger body of the parish faithful.  For now, let us always remember Sister Vicki in our prayers as she surely remembers us.
     
    Fr. Steven C. Kostoff
    Christ the Savior/Holy Spirit Orthodox Church
    http://www.christthesavioroca.org

  • Nativity Icon
    Sunday before the Nativity

    The Sunday before the Nativity of the Lord (December 18-24) is known as the Sunday of the Holy Fathers. On this day the Church commemorates all those who were well-pleasing to God from all ages, from Adam to St Joseph the Betrothed of the Most Holy Theotokos, those who are mentioned in the geneology of Luke 3:23-38. The holy prophets and prophetesses are also remembered today, especially the Prophet Daniel and the three holy youths (December 17).

    The Troparion to the Prophet Daniel and the three holy youths (“Great are the accomplishments of faith…) is quite similar to the Troparion for St Theodore the Recruit (February 17, and the first Saturday of Great Lent). The Kontakion to St Theodore, who suffered martyrdom by fire, reminds us that he also had faith as his breastplate (see I Thessalonians 5:8).

  • ~Uh, why is this such big news?~

    Sexual images are everywhere and thrust into faces of children all the time at every hour of the day in movies,  music, TV, print ads- why is it such big news that Jamie~Lynn Spears is pregnant? I am wondering if the big news is that at 16 she is having sex, because  you don’t hear much in the media or from Hollywood that sex is not for teenagers. Why such an out cry?  Is it the fact that she has had sex or that she is pregnant?   Now that she got pregnant, and hasn’t killed her baby, are there going to be less sexual images out there and a push to help clean up our culture of sexual depravity and promote purity and virginity in our teenagers?  Will the shows on Nickelodeon and beyond,  stop talking about sex and  dating at young ages etc…Will people stop asking children if they have a boyfriend or girlfriend? Will images of marriage and monogamy now replace images of  promiscuity?  Or are we just going to try and pass out more birth control? The problem isn’t that this extremely rich little girl is now going to have a baby. The problem is that our children are not protected from images that are taking away their innocence. The problem is that children aren’t taught to respect one another and their precious bodies.The problem is that children need the love and protection of their parents, they do not need a boyfriend or girlfriend. Children need to be protected, loved, educated and comforted. Yes people, sex leads to babies and that is a wonderful thing but it is not for children. So, no sex= no babies. Children having sex only leads to broken hearts and broken spirits.  Uh, no news there!

      Wake up America!

     

     

  • ~Orthodox Humor, Nativity Fast 2007~

    If you are an Orthodox Christian, when do you know it is almost Christmas?  When your 8 year old son asks you wearily,  ”Mom, when are we going to have steak and chicken again?” Said while looking down at his veggie burger and most likely thought at dinner the night before when he rejected his salmon and the night before when he refused his baked vegetables and spinach pie.

  • ~Well, no secret there- it all makes perfect sense~

    Mt

    Fast Like The Greek Monks and Live To A Ripe Old Age!

    Living like a monk can help you beat cancer.

    Researchers studying the
    1,500 inhabitants of 20 Greek monasteries found that they have some of the lowest rates of the disease in the world.
    But, before you all rush off to take your monastic vows, let us point out the drawbacks. The monksʼ daily regime begins with an hour of prayers before dawn. At breakfast – a piece of hard, dry bread and a cup of tea with no milk –they sit in silence while passages from the Greek scriptures are read from a pulpit in the refectory. Much of the day is taken up with manual labour in the gardens. The monks grow most of what they eat. But there is little dairy produce because female animals, as well as women, are banned. Olive oil is allowed,but only on alternate days. And fish is a treat reserved for feast days.

    The good news is that they are allowed to drink the local red wine – but only on Tuesdays, Thursdays and at weekends.
    The result of all this abstinence is that lung and bladder cancer are unknown on the remote,
    mountainous peninsula. Rates of prostate cancer are also extremely low. Since 1994, when doctors began testing the monks regularly, only 11 have developed the disease. That works out at less than a quarter of the international average. Haris Aidonopoulos, a urologist at the University of Thessaloniki, said the monksʼ diet could explain the difference in the statistics. “What seems to be the key is a diet that alternates between olive oil and non-olive oil days, and plenty of plant proteins. Small, simple meals at regular intervals are very important.” Michalis Hourdakis, a dietician associated with Athens University, said: “This limited consumption of calories has been found to lengthen life. “Meat has been associated with intestinal cancer, while fruit and vegetables help ward off prostate cancer.”

    A diet based on staple foods like fruit and vegetables, pasta, rice and soya dishes, as well as bread and olives is thought to be the key to the monksʼs good health. The lack of air pollution on Mount Athos, as well as their hard work in the fields, also play a part, the researchers said. Kim Hardwick, a senior nurse with charity Cancerbackup, said: “We know that people can reduce their risk of cancer by making lifestyle choices.”
    “Eating a well-balanced diet that includes five portions of fruit and vegetables and cutting down on the amount of red meat we eat has also been shown to reduce the risk of cancer.”
     
    Dr. Julie Sharp, of Cancer Research UK, said: “Our diet influences our risk of many cancers, including cancers of the bowel, stomach, mouth, throat and breast. You can reduce your cancer risk by eating a healthy, balanced diet that is high in fiber, fruit and vegetables, and low in red and processed meat and saturated fat.”
    By Jo Willey
    Dec 7th, 2007, Daily Express

    Note: While good health is not the
    reason we fast, it appears that it is a
    good side benefit.
    map of Mount Athos
     

  •  ~ A few photos of what we have been up to~

    Maria~Angelica and Basil playing Lego, kissy kissy for the best big brother!

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    Family photo at the “Nutcracker”. Out to dinner after the ballet- one of the boys took this shot.

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    Enjoying dinner with our dear friends and koumbari from back home. (Joanne, Basil was right, don’t believe me!)

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    Cooking and Jonah laying the vegetables in a lovely pattern.

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    And lastly, cleaning with our pearls on, of course!

     December 2007 cleaning with our pearls on