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Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message November 10, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Last Sunday, we welcomed His Eminence Metropolitan Constantine of Denver to celebrate the Hierarchical Divine Liturgy with a combined Metropolis Choir of over 60 people. Our parish hosted the Metropolis of Denver Church Musicians Conference and had a wonderful time doing so. The love, energy, hospitality and creative energies of our welcoming community was acknowledged by all of our visiting friends. I am so proud of, and thankful for this loving parish who always exhibits open arms. God bless you for your gracious and benevolent hearts. And first among you, I thank our dedicated St. Anna Choir for your example of sacrifice and love. You are all so lovely and our parish is blessed with your sacred ministry. 

Now that this Conference is in the rear-view mirror, I wish to call your attention to another Metropolis Ministry; one that will benefit the growth and development of our spiritual wellness for generations to come. I am referring to our Metropolis of Denver Retreat Center in Golden, Colorado. 

Our Metropolis recently purchased and began the herculean task of renovating and updating the facilities on 58 beautiful acres. This camp and retreat center is available now for small retreats and will be housing our Metropolis Camp Emmanuel by the summer of 2026. There is endless potential, and much has already been done (recall, our parish pledged $30,000 over three years to assist in this effort) to move the Retreat Center in the right direction. But the assistance of every parish in our Metropolis is greatly needed.

Tomorrow is the designated Camp for the Future Sunday throughout our great and expansive Metropolis. There will be brochures available tomorrow in the narthex to learn more about this vital and vibrant ministry of the Metropolis of Denver. And there will be opportunities to contribute to the Retreat Center. As you depart from the Divine Liturgy, there will be a collection basket in the foyer of the building, and there are QR Codes placed around to make direct contributions if you so desire. I personally look forward to leading retreats there and participating in summer camp on these beautiful grounds. Please, support this new and worthy effort. Ours is the last Metropolis to obtain its own retreat center. Let’s invest in the spirituality of our young people and provide them a camp that reflects our commitment to them. But also remember, this facility is not just a youth camp. It is a place for all of us to gather, to grow, to commit, and to engage. 

Camp for the Future is now! 

Also, please remember that tomorrow is our Fall Parish Assembly. Come with your comments and questions and be prepared to fulfil your responsibility as the governing voice of our parish. As I always remind you, the bishop is not the voice of the parish. The priest is not the voice of the parish. The parish council is not the voice of the parish. You, the collective general assembly of parishioners in good standing is the voice of the parish. We have accomplished a great deal in a very short amount of time. Now, to the glory of God, we will continue down a path of service, witness, worship and fellowship. God bless you and keep you in His mercy. I remain,

With Much Love in XC,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

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Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message October 27, 2024

The world has found in you a great champion in time of peril, as you emerged the victor in routing the barbarians. For as you brought to naught the boasts of Lyaios, imparting courage to Nestor in the stadium, in like manner, holy one, great Martyr Demetrios, invoke Christ God for us, that He may grant us His great mercy.

Apolytikion of St. Demetrios the Great Martyr

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Through the intercessions and prayers of St. Demetrios the Great Martyr, may he find you in God’s comfort and favor.

Tomorrow morning we will be celebrating the divine services of the Church to honor this magnificent saint. The Orthros is at 9:00 am followed by the Divine Liturgy at 10:00 am.

Saint Demetrios suffered in Thessalonica during the reign of Galerius Maximian (c. 306). He belonged to one of the most distinguished families of the province of Macedonia and was widely admired not only because of his noble ancestry and grace of bearing, but also for virtue, wisdom and goodness of heart surpassing that of his elders.

The military expertise of Saint Demetrios led Galerius, as Caesar of the Eastern Empire, to appoint him commander of the Roman forces in Thessaly and Proconsul for Hellas. But for all this, Demetrios remained ever aware of the underlying realities of life. Since faith in Christ had touched his heart, all the glory of this world meant nothing to him, and there was nothing he preferred to teaching and preaching the word of God.

Despite the persecution directed against Christians by the Emperor, Saint Demetrios brought a large number of pagans to the faith. His words convinced them because they saw in the righteousness, peace and brotherly love that marked his life an illustration of the truth of which he spoke.

The Emperor Maximian had just won a series of brilliant victories over the Scythians and was on his way back to Rome when he halted at Thessalonica to receive the acclamations of the populace and to offer sacrifices in thanksgiving to the idols. A number of pagans, envious of the success of the Saint, took advantage of the Emperor’s presence in the city to denounce Demetrios as a Christian. Maximian’s astonishment gave way to violent indignation when he was told that Demetrios’ was making use of his official position to spread the faith. Demetrios was summoned and confined in a cell, located in the basement of nearby baths.

Maximian arranged for games and gladiatorial combats to take place in the amphitheater of the city. He had brought with him a man of gigantic stature and Herculean strength called Lyaios, a Vandal by origin. Such was this man’s strength and skill in single combat that no one could withstand him. There was in the city a young Christian called Nestor, who observing the empty pride of the Emperor in the victories of his champion, made up his mind to show him that real power belongs to Christ alone. He ran to the baths where Demetrios was imprisoned and asked for the protection of his prayer in going to confront the giant. The Martyr made the sign of the Cross on the brow and the heart of the boy, and sent him like David before Goliath. He reached the amphitheater just as the heralds were crying out on all sides for any who would stand against Lyaios. Advancing towards the Emperor, Nestor threw his tunic to the ground and shouted, “God of Demetrios, help me!” In the first encounter, at the very moment the giant rushed upon him, Nestor slipped aside and stabbed him to the heart with his dagger. There was uproar and amazement at the marvel, and people asked themselves how a mere child, relying neither on strength nor weapons, could so suddenly have brought down the barbarian.

Rather than yield to the sign of the sovereign power of God, the Emperor flew into a rage and ordered the immediate arrest of Nestor and his beheading outside the city. He had heard Nestor calling upon the God of Demetrios and, supposing the Saint had used some kind of witchcraft, Maximian ordered his soldiers to go and thrust Demetrios through with their lances, without trial, in the depths of his prison cell. There were some Christians, including Demetrios’ servant Lupus, present at his martyrdom, and when the soldiers had gone, they reverently buried the Saint’s body.

It was God’s will that the grace with which He filled Saint Demetrios should remain active even after his death. This is why He caused to flow from his body a myron with a delightful scent, which had the property of healing all who took it as an unction, with faith in the intercession of the Saint. Time and again, during sixteen hundred years, Saint Demetrios has given proof of his benevolent care for the city of Thessalonica and its inhabitants. He has defended them from the attacks of barbarians, he has preserved them from plague and famine, healed the sick and comforted the afflicted.

Adapted from The Synaxarion: The Lives of the Saints of the Orthodox Church, Vol. 1, compiled by Hieromonk Makarios of Simonos Petra and translated from the French by Christopher Hookway (Chalkidike, Greece: Holy Convent of the Annunciation of Our Lady, 1998)

With Love in Christ,

Fr. Anthony Savas

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Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message October 20, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I pray you are all well on this lovely, autumn afternoon. Finally, the air is crispy, the mountain tops are dusty, and we are full steam ahead into one of the most beautiful times of the year. May this fall and winter be safe and wonderful for everyone!

As we approach the end of this month, I want to formally call our attention to a fast-approaching and most amazing event in the life of our young community. Though it has been mentioned in our Bulletin for the past several weeks, we’ve been somewhat publicly quiet about our hosting of the Metropolis of Denver Church Musicians Conference, to be held at St. Anna’s from October 31 – November 3, 2024. Well, now you know!!!

Our parish was only a few years old when we hosted the Metropolis Oratorical Festival. It was our opportunity even in rented space at St. Thomas More, to showcase the spirit, people, creativity and faith of our small (at the time) parish. Now we will enjoy the same blessing, to welcome Greek Orthodox singers, chanters, and accompanists from throughout Utah, Colorado, Texas, and Idaho.

Though the Conference will arrive on a Thursday to begin workshops and practices, we will be most blessed as a parish on Sunday, November 3rd with a Hierarchical Divine Liturgy, celebrated by His Eminence Metropolitan Constantine of Denver, together with a combined choir of over 60 individuals. How glorious! How inspirational! How beautiful!

To be sure, members of our own choir have been working extremely hard organizing this event and participating in joint practices with singers from Holy Trinity and Prophet Elias. Our chairman, and choir director, Barbara Kalantzes has led a dynamic committee with the sole purpose of welcoming our Metropolis to our church, to our city, and into our hearts. Thank you, Koumbara Barb for all of your dedication and energy!

When you come to church on November 3, know that the seating arrangements will be slightly altered, as per usual. The south aisle will be closed, as the combined, Metropolis Choir will take up nearly all of the spaces on the extreme, south side of the sanctuary. We will install our additional seating in the other areas of the church, and the Orthros and Liturgy will be broadcasted into the fellowship hall. Though we tend to fill the church each Sunday, there will be special accommodations made, so we can fit our own, enthused worshippers, and our guests into our sacred space. I do encourage everyone to be with us, for what will prove to be a most inspired day. 

You are also welcome to join us for Paraklesis on that Friday evening at 6:00 pm, and Great Vespers at 6:00 pm on Saturday evening. All three members of the chanting group Eikona will be here, leading the chanting of these services, together with the Orthros on Sunday. 

PLEASE KEEP IN MIND THAT THE ORTHROS WILL BEGIN AT 8:00 AM ON SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD, FOLLOWED BY THE HIERARCHICAL DIVINE LITURGY AT AROUND 9:15 AM. 

This is to accommodate the travel schedule of our Metropolis Conference participants. 

Though the dinner events on Friday and Saturday evenings are for registered participants only, the Sunday Brunch is being hosted by our parish council in honor of His Eminence Metropolitan Constantine of Denver. All are invited to remain after services and break bread together. Though His Eminence was certainly with us in July for our Thyranoixia events, this is the first time he will be here as the hierarchical celebrant since his enthronement as our Metropolitan. We welcome him with enthusiasm and gratitude as our local bishop. Many Years to him! 

I am looking forward to our parish hosting this event. Many people throughout our Mountain West have heard about our parish and are curious to see what has been created here, to God’s glory. Let’s welcome them with open arms and anticipate the beauty of what this choir is going to sound like. We will all be richly blessed on that day. I remain,

With Much Love in XC.

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

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Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message October 6, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

When you go into the Social Hall tomorrow morning, you will notice many, large garbage bags lined up against the south wall. The teens of our parish are primarily responsible for those bags. No, they did not engage in a cleaning project today, or rake leaves from outside. Those bags are not filled with trash or yard waste. 

Earlier today, out GOYAns prepared 250 food packets for their peers at Entrada and Diamond Ridge High Schools. Very soon, the kids at those schools will be on Fall Break, and many of them will not have anything to eat while away from school. Our children, with the support of our St. Anna’s Outreach Ministry Team and our Food Support Ministry assembled the bags that will go home with the students from these two, beloved alternative high schools located in nearby Midvale.

The Blue Bin that you see every time you come into the church is there to help fill their food pantries. This is an ongoing effort, and we always encourage you that every time you come into the church building, please bring non-perishable food items, to be delivered to the schools each and every Tuesday. Today’s project was separate and apart from our continual effort of helping to stock their pantries. This project was specific in helping to ensure proper nutrition to children in need who will soon be on Fall Break. For many of these vulnerable youth, no school means no meals.

Thank you to everyone who has donated towards these worthy efforts. Your contributions to our Food Service Ministry provide ongoing supplements to our Blue Bin, as well as help us shop for projects such as today’s. The 250 bags that were prepared today cost over $2,500 to provide. Your love and generosity helped make them possible. 

Please pray for the children and their families who will utilize these food bags, as well as for the children who assembled them, and the people who supported them. Everyone has their vulnerabilities and challenges. When we work together to help alleviate them, the Holy Spirit shines through us. 

God bless you all for your kindness and sensitivities to those in need.

With Much Love in Christ,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

Categories
Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message September 22, 2024

As a sharer of the ways and a successor to the throne of the Apostles, O inspired of God, thou foundest discipline to be a means of ascent to divine vision. Wherefore, having rightly divided the word of truth, thou didst also contest for the Faith even unto blood,
O Hieromartyr Phocas. Intercede with Christ our God that our souls be saved.

Hymn of St. Phocas of Sinope

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I trust and pray you are all well. And that this evening is blessed for each and every one of you. 

As we have entered into early fall, and the yields from home gardens are beginning to slow down, I would like to call your attention to the Martyr Saint we celebrate tomorrow. St. Phocas of Sinope is the patron saint of gardens and gardeners. His was a life of faith, service, piety, sacrifice, and love. Let us be inspired by him and pray for his continued intercessions. 

Saint Phokas (Phokás) came from Sinope (Sinópē) and his only possessions were a garden which he cultivated with great diligence. His income from the garden was very small. But since he was a good steward and frugal in his needs, he would always have something for the poor. Saint Phokas studied the Holy Scriptures with pleasure. He even told those who saw him studying that our soul is also a garden, which requires care, so that it does not produce thorns and thistles. The gardener Phokas also desired that everyone’s souls should become spiritual gardens. So wherever he could, he contributed to their purification and cultivation. While he was selling vegetables and fruits, he spoke words of great spiritual profit at the same time. Not only did he benefit Christians, but he also converted many pagans.

At that time, the idolaters were persecuting Christians. Therefore, when it became known that the gardener Phokas was a Christian, the rulers sent soldiers to arrest him.

Since the Saint’s home was near the castle gate which communicated with the port, he often had many visitors; sometimes foreign travelers, and sometimes the poor. So when the soldiers came he welcomed them as guests. After some time had passed, he asked them the purpose of their visit. Obliged by his hospitality they disclosed their secret, that they were seeking the Christian Phokas in order to behead him. They even told him that he would be doing them a great favor if he would help them.

Unperturbed, Saint Phokas came out of his house to dig and prepare his own grave, and the next day he told the soldiers who he was. They were astonished and ashamed, because they had been received by Saint Phokas with so much love that they did not want to kill him. The Saint understood their difficulty and told them not to hesitate, but to carry out their orders since it was not they who would be responsible for his murder, but rather those who sent them. By speaking in this way he persuaded the soldiers to behead him.

An accurate account of the Martyr’s death was written by Asterios (Astérios) of Amasea (+ 410).

Christians built a magnificent church on the site of his beheading, and they placed the honorable relics of the Holy Martyr in it. This became a source of comfort for the afflicted, and healing for the sick. A fragment of the Holy Relics of Saint Phokas is located in the Monastery of Proussos in Evritania.

When his homeland, Sinope, was in danger of famine, wheat was found, thanks to the Saint’s protection. He appeared several times to sailors who were in danger of sinking in the sea, and saved them from drowning. At other times he would awaken the helmsman, telling him to be ready, for a storm was coming. Other times he was seen by the sailors in rough seas helping sometimes on the ropes, sometimes on the sails, or sometimes protecting the ship, so that it would not be wrecked on a reef, or be caught in heavy rain.

Here is how the custom of having Saint Phokas as a guest at their table was begun among sailors. When they were sitting at the table, one of the sailors bought the Saint’s share; the next day another sailor bought it, and so they collected the money. When the ship reached its destination, they distributed the money to the poor.

The Saint worked many miracles of healing. He appeared to some people in their sleep, but he was not visible to others. Thus, the insignificant and humble gardener Phokas is honored by Christians because of his gift of working miracles.

The Holy Martyr Phokas is especially venerated by sailors, and he is also invoked by those who travel by sea.

This is not a common name, but tomorrow in church, if you see Erin (Phocia) Lucy, before she goes off to teach Sunday School, please wish her a happy Name Day. She is literally the only person in our parish who celebrates this wonderful saint.

With Love in XC,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

Categories
Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message September 15, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I pray, that on this day, as we lift up and commemorate the precious Cross of our Lord, that you will find rich and eternal blessings in the long-suffering ministry of Christ. On September 14th, we celebrate the Universal Exaltation of the Cross. It is a day of prayerful contemplation, gratitude, and wonderment. The path of Christ was the path to the Cross. The path to death. Our path, in Him, now leads to light, life, grace, and eternal joy. Praise be to our generous God!

I want to share with you a special video that was just sent out. As you all well know, last Wednesday was the 23rd Anniversary of the tragic events of 9/11. I held a small Memorial Service on that day, (it’s on our YouTube Chanel), praying for all souls departed that day, and by name for the Orthodox Christians.  The day is still haunting and surreal. Every year, among many names, I read the name “Anthony Savas,” an inspector with the New York Port Authority who perished at Ground Zero. If you want to be humbled, read your name in a Memorial Service. I pray for him, his family, and all who were fatally bitten by the venomous fangs of bloodlust, hatred, and unthinkable violence. May all their Memories be Ever Eternal. 

Please take the time to watch this video. the 9/11 Memorial Service at the St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and Shrine in New York. St. Nicholas was the only house of worship destroyed on that fateful day, and is now rebuilt as an open shrine, dedicated to the spiritual healing and comfort to all. The service was held this morning, on the Feast of the Cross. Indeed, how fitting.

Please keep this day sacred and solemn. Enjoy time with your loved ones and live in gratitude for the blessings you receive. No matter our circumstances, as challenging as they may be, we are all truly blessed. God bless, keep and protect you all.

With Much Love in Christ,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

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Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message September 8, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Tomorrow, we celebrate the Nativity of the Theotokos. The large icon on the south side of the back wall of the church sanctuary depicts this great feast. Though the Church has piously celebrated this event from the earliest of centuries, we are reminded that there is no scriptural reference to the birth, infancy, or childhood of the Virgin. I offer to you the commentary of Fr. Thomas Hopko concerning this feast, and its historical significance. 

In addition to the celebration of the Annunciation, there are three major feasts in the Church honoring Mary, the Theotokos. The first of these is the feast of her nativity which is kept on the eighth of September.

The record of the birth of Mary is not found in the Bible. The traditional account of the event is taken from the apocryphal writings which are not part of the New Testament scriptures. The traditional teaching which is celebrated in the hymns and verses of the festal liturgy is that Joachim and Anna were a pious Jewish couple who were among the small and faithful remnant—“the poor and the needy”—who were awaiting the promised messiah. The couple was old and childless. They prayed earnestly to the Lord for a child, since among the Jews barrenness was a sign of God’s disfavor. In answer to their prayers, and as the reward of their unwavering fidelity to God, the elderly couple was blessed with the child who was destined, because of her own personal goodness and holiness, to become the Mother of the Messiah-Christ.

Your nativity, O Virgin, has proclaimed joy to the whole universe. The Sun of Righteousness, Christ our God, has shone from you, O Theotokos. By annulling the curse he bestowed a blessing. By destroying death he has granted us eternal life.

Apolytikion

By your nativity, O most pure virgin, Joachim and Anna are freed from barrenness; Adam and Eve from the corruption of death. And we, your people, freed from the guilt of sin, celebrate and sing to you: The barren woman gives birth to the Theotokos, the Nourisher of our Life.

Kontakion

The fact that there is no Biblical verification of the facts of Mary’s birth is incidental to the meaning of the feast. Even if the actual background of the event as celebrated in the Church is questionable from an historical point of view, the divine meaning of it “for us men and for our salvation” is obvious. There had to be one born of human flesh and blood who would be spiritually capable of being the Mother of Christ, and she herself had to be born into the world of persons who were spiritually capable of being her parents.

The feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos, therefore, is a glorification of Mary’s birth, of Mary herself and of her righteous parents. It is a celebration as well of the very first preparation of the salvation of the world. For the “Vessel of Light,” the “Book of the Word of Life,” the “Door to the Orient,” the “Throne of Wisdom” is being prepared on earth by God Himself in the birth of the holy girl-child Mary.

The verses of the feast are filled with titles for Mary such as those in the quotations above. They are inspired by the message of the Bible, both the Old and New Testaments. The specific Biblical readings of the feast give indications of this.

At Vespers the three Old Testamental readings are “mariological” in their New Testamental interpretation. Thus, Jacob’s Ladder which unites heaven and earth and the place which is named “the house of God” and the “gate of heaven” (Gen 28.10–17) are taken, to indicate the union of God with men which is realized most fully and perfectly—both spiritually and physically—in Mary the Theotokos, Bearer of God. So also the vision of the temple with the “door ‘to the East’” perpetually closed and filled with the “glory of the Lord” symbolizes Mary, called in the hymns of the feast “the living temple of God filled with the divine Glory” (Ezek 43.27–44.4). Mary is also identified with the “house” which the Divine Wisdom has built for himself according to the reading from Proverbs 9.1–11.

The Gospel reading of Matins is the one read at all feasts of the Theotokos, the famous Magnificat from Saint Luke in which Mary says: “My soul magnifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Saviour, for he has regarded the low estate of his handmaiden, for behold, henceforth all generations will call me blessed” (Lk 1.47).

The epistle reading of the Divine Liturgy is the famous passage about the coming of the Son of God in “the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of man” (Phil 2.5–11) and the gospel reading is that which is always read for feasts of the Theotokos—the woman in the crowd glorifies the Mother of Jesus, and the Lord himself responds that the same blessedness which his mother receives is for all “who hear the word of God and keep it” (Lk 11.27–28).

Thus, on the feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos, as on all liturgical celebrations of Christ’s Mother, we proclaim and celebrate that through God’s graciousness to mankind every Christian receives what the Theotokos receives, the “great mercy” which is given to human persons because of Christ’s birth from the Virgin.

Please remember that Sunday School begins tomorrow. Pray for the sanctification of this new school year, and for the protection of all our beloved children in the Lord.

With Much Love in Christ,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

Categories
Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message September 1, 2024

Happy New Year

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Yes, Happy New Year, indeed!

No, I do not have my dates mixed up, nor am I looking at the wrong month of the calendar. This Sunday, September 1, 2024, is actually the beginning of the Ecclesiastical New Year.

Also known as the Feast of the Indiction, it represents the resetting of the Church Calendar, and the beginning of the cycle of spiritual commemorations in the lives of Orthodox Christians. All of these feasts and celebrations are actually bookended between the Nativity of the Theotokos on September 8th, and the Dormition of the Theotokos on August 15th. Our knowledge of, our exposure to, our interaction with, and our identity in Christ is made possible through the ministry of the Mother of God. 

“Indiction” is a Latin word meaning “to impose.” It was originally used in this context upon the schedule of the Roman Government issuing taxes. It was the beginning of the Roman fiscal quarter, in that before the Julian Calendar, Rome started their New Year in September. The date of September 1st takes on a religious identity when in the year 312, the Emperor Constantine sees a vision of the Cross in the sky, thusly inspiring him to unify the Empire under the banner of the Cross. 

On September 1st, this significant day of “beginnings,” Our Lord Jesus Christ walked into the Synagogue (Luke 4:16-22), opened the scroll, and read out loud for all to hear, and for all to see: “The spirit of the Lord is upon me; because he has anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives, and recovering sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.”

The Lord proclaims His divinity, He establishes His ministry, He articulates what He’ll accomplish, and He introduces hope to a darkened, hardened, and wandering world. 

Sundy is the beginning of the Ecclesiastical New Year. Let’s treat it as would the secular New Year – but with a heightened sense of purpose. 

Set new goals for yourself – not career goals or academic goals, but goals for a more robust prayer life.

Make New Year’s Resolutions – but not to exercise more or diet, but to practice more acts of kindness and generosity.

Anticipate what is to come – but not just birthdays, holidays and anniversaries – worship services, retreats, Bible Studies, Lent, Holy Week, Pascha!

This Sunday, the Church hits that big “Reset Button.” We start anew, and we forge into the unknown. We honor the past as we look to the future. We take new steps, and we take them boldly – as Christ proclaimed His earthly ministry through the words of the Prophet. May this day…may this Year, bring you countless blessings and a closer relationship with our Lord, God, and Savior Jesus Christ.  

Happy New Year!

With Much Love in Christ,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

Categories
Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message August 18, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Having just celebrated the Dormition or Falling Asleep of the Theotokos and Ever-Virgin Mary, the Church remains this great mystery in our hearts as the official Leave Taking of the Feast is on August 23rd. In the continued spirit of this great Festival, I would like to share an article on the Dormition that I very much enjoyed and appreciated. Written by Dr. Philip Kariatsis, Sub-Dean and Associate Professor of Theology at St. Andrew’s Greek Orthodox Theological College in Sydney, Australia, it brilliantly describes the grand themes, and delicate subtilties of the falling asleep of the Mother of God.

Enjoy… 

Without doubt in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, “our glorious Lady Theotokos,” has a pre-eminent place in the life of the Orthodox Church. The month of August, for example, is dedicated to the Virgin Mother, not to mention other great feasts that are celebrated throughout the entire liturgical year. Not only do we celebrate the Dormition (or Falling Asleep) of the Theotokos[1] in August, but there are Supplication Services which are held every day in the first two weeks of this month leading to the great feast, as well as the designated period of fasting which the Church has prescribed. This betrays both the great devotion attributed to the blessed Mother personally by the faithful of the Church throughout the ages—and rightly so, since we read in the Gospel according to St Luke: “Surely, from now on, all generations will call me blessed” (Lk 1:48)—and the extent to which her person has infused Orthodox spirituality.

In celebrating the Dormition (or “Falling Asleep”) of the Mother of God, it is very often thought that the Church honors the ‘end’ of Mary’s life. Looking however at the various hymns ascribed to this day, we discover that it is the very beginning of her life that is celebrated—namely, her entrance into eternal blessedness! This inexplicable and wondrously paradoxical notion of death as entrance into life permeates the entire hymnology of this significant Feast Day: The Vesperal hymns, for example, begin with, “Marvel at the wondrous paradox  [Ὤ τοῦ παραδόξου θαύματος…], the fount of our life has been laid within a tomb; [and yet] her tomb has become a ladder to heaven above.”[2] Moreover, in the dismissal hymn [Apolytikion] of the Feast, the Church sings: “In your falling asleep, O Theotokos… you were transported to life [Ἐν τῇ κοιμήσει… μετέστης πρὸς τὴν ζωήν].”[3]

In depicting the events leading to Mary’s dormition, the Doxastikon of the Orthros Service begins with this seemingly non-sensical notion that, in the case of the Virgin Mother, death, is “deathless”: “At you deathless Dormition [Τῇ ἀθανάτῳ σου Κοιμήσει…], O Theotokos and Mother of Life, clouds caught the Apostles up into the air; and, from being dispersed throughout the world, they were reunited before your immaculate body.”[4] In observing this important Feast Day to the Theotokos, we see that death becomes the means through which the Virgin Mother truly lives. It is precisely for this reason, that the Dormition is cause for celebration, cheer, merriment, and solemn joy since we see the reality of life beyond the grave.  

Reflecting a little further we see that, whereas death and life are irreconcilable notions for the world, for our Virgin Mother, on the other hand, death is but a gateway through which she enters into the unfading and resplendent Light of eternity; there, to be forever reunited with her Son, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. Indeed, there, forever to pray on our behalf to her Son and Saviour of the world for the salvation of our souls. The profoundly beautiful Doxastikon of Vespers—sung in all the eight tones of Byzantine chant—asks:

as you now live forever with the life-bearing King who is your Son, intercede unceasingly [πρέσβευε διηνεκῶς], that He may guard us, your children, and that He may save us from every hostile assault, since we are under your protection.[5]

If by the Cross of Jesus Christ, and his resurrection from the dead, death is conquered and the victory of undying life is universally bestowed upon the world, in the person of the Virgin Mother we behold this abiding and boundless gift of unending blessedness personally received, embraced and appropriated by Mary in her life. Indeed, having lived her entire life in the presence of, and united—heart and soul—with her Son and Savior, her “death” was shown to be a final passageway, a culminating moment for that which she truly longed—forever to be with her Son and Savior of the world.   

The Feast Day of the Dormition is a most compelling reminder of the hope with which we too are called to live, in this transient and fleeting life. In the same way that, in the case of the Virgin Mother, death was experienced as life, so too can this become our experience as well in our “final” moments here on earth. That is to say, in having the Mother of God as our pre-eminent example in this life—to the extent that She truly embodies what it means to live a Christ-loving and Christ centered life—we too are able to live with the future hope of our Lord’s gift and promise of unending life to us, to the extent, of course, that we truly desire and seek to live by His love—in all that we do—in this life.

Through her “death,” the Virgin Mother provides the much-needed confidence and conviction that death can in fact become an act of truly living for all. What’s more, death need not be understood as that harrowing moment when we are plunged into soul-destroying darkness and horrifying non-existence; on the contrary, our physical death, as it was for our Virgin Mother, so it can become for us, a passageway into life and into our Lord’s eternal kingdom where His loving presence and embrace will forever reign; and where His unfading and resplendent light with eternally shine.

The saints of the Church, for whom Christ was literally, truly everything—and here we are reminded of St Porphyrios who would often say, “ὁ Χριστός εἶναι τό πᾶν [Christ is everything]”—death was precisely seen in these terms. And so, for example, St Ignatius the God-bearer (d. ca 110AD), upon his impending death, urged his disciplines not to prevent him from dying at his impending martyrdom. In accord—one could say—with the Virgin Mary’s vision of death, in his letter to the Romans, St Ignatius wrote in a profoundly powerful way about death as true life:

hinder me not from living, do not wish to keep me in a state of death; and while I desire to belong to God, do not give me over to the world. Allow me to obtain the pure light [μὴ ἐμκοδίσητέ μοι ζῆσαι, μὴ θελήσητέ με ἀποθανεῖν τὸν Θεὸν θέλοντα εἶναι, κόσμῳ μὴ χαρίσητε. Ἄφετέ με καθαρὸν φῶς λαβεῖν]. [6]

It is precisely for this reason that, in quietly pondering the significance of the Dormition, may we be reminded of, and discern, the “deathlessness of death”; may we be overcome with an intense sense of calm and serenity; joy and blessedness; delight and radiance, beholding death not as a departure and farewell, but, in the case of the Mother of God, her entrance—and by extension ours as well—into the gift of eternal blessedness and life everlasting. In the end, may we also be emboldened to behold death not as separation and rupture but union with Christ and His kingdom. 


[1] Even though the historical origins of the feast are vague, already before 500AD, it was being celebrated on the 15 August. It was in the seventh century, that the Byzantine Emperor Maurice officially designated 15 August as the day for celebrating the Dormition of the Theotokos.

[2] The first of the ‘Automela’ hymns in the Vespers on the eve of 15 August sung immediately after «Κύριε ἐκέκραξα πρὸς σε, εἰσάκουσόν μου…», “Lord, I have cried to You; hear me…”. Cited in https://dcs.goarch.org/goa/dcs/h/s/2024/08/14/ve/gr-en/index.html (accessed 13 August 2024).

[3] Apolytikion of the Feast. Cited in https://dcs.goarch.org/goa/dcs/h/s/2024/08/14/ve/gr-en/index.html (accessed 13 August 2024).

[4] Doxastikon of the Orthros Service of the Feast sung immediately before the Great Doxology.

[5] The part of the Doxastikon of the Vespers Service of the Feast cited is that excerpt which is sung in the plagal fourth tone.

[6] St Ignatius of Antioch, Letter to the Roman 6,PG 5: 692BC.

With Much Love in Christ,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter

Categories
Pastoral Letters

Pastoral Message July 28, 2024

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I pray you are all enjoying a blessed and amazing day. As we approach the final weekend of July, let us turn our prayerful attention to our preparations for the Dormition of the Theotokos. We have continued to plan the Paraklesis Services to be outside, as in our past few years. However, please be advised, and I hope you are not disappointed, that we are moving the services for at least the first week of the Fast back inside the church.

My family and I will be out of town from July 30th through August 9, as we participate in our Project Mexico home build, then spend a couple days in San Diego doing, well, NOTHING! While it is completely rare for a priest to be out of town as the Dormition Fast begins, with all of our other activities of the Summer (Camp Emmanuel, Clergy/Laity, Finalized Construction, Thyranoixia and hosting three Hierarchs), we had to choose the latest building slot.

The weather is still going to be hot, and I don’t feel right asking Fr. Elias to move the church outdoors. He is most helpful and gracious enough, no need to pile on additional tasks. We will play it by ear and move our Paraklesis Services outdoors if and when comfortable and appropriate. That said, I really do enjoy praying these services out in our garden. 

I would also like to thank others who were not properly mentioned last week for their financial support of our Thyranoixia Weekend. Steve & Elaina Simos and Bruce & Shari Lindsay were instrumental in our successful events. Bruce was also most helpful as our volunteer Public Relations Director, as he wrote and sent press releases to all local media concerning our Opening.

And wow, we enjoyed wonderful coverage! 

Tomorrow, directly following the Divine Liturgy, we will pray for our Project Mexico Team. Our Mission Team consists of 16 people, primarily comprised of St. Anna parishioners, with one from Holy Trinity Cathedral. This is the third time our parish has sent a team to Project Mexico, and the fifth time we have supported a complete home build. Please keep us in your personal prayers as well; that we arrive and return safely, and that our work site will be without incident. The work isn’t dangerous, per se, but it is an active construction site with the possibility of injury constantly lurking. 

And most especially, please pray for the families who receive the homes that we build, and the families who await such a gift. We will not cure poverty in a week, but to the Glory of God, we will lessen its grip for a single, worthy family.  

Lastly, since this message is turning out to be more a string of announcements than a pastoral letter, we have established the beginning of our St. Anna Sunday School Year to begin Sunday, September 8th, 2024. This is later than we wanted, but again, this summer has been uniquely busy. Registration is upon us. We look forward to our young people once again, engaging in their spiritual formation and faithful education. God bless our teachers, administration and students!!!

See you tomorrow at the Divine Liturgy. Enjoy the rest of this lovely day. I remain,

With Much Love in XC,

Fr. Anthony Savas
Protopresbyter