St. Luke Greek Orthodox Church, Broomall, PA PUBLISH DATE: May 16, 2004

 

Email this Page Printer Friendly Version

New York City To Host 22nd Annual Young Adult Ministries Conference July 23 - July 26, 2004
April 20, 2004

The young adults of the Direct Archdiocesan District are eagerly preparing for this summer’s 22nd Annual National Young Adult Conference, which is scheduled for July 23-26 at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City. This year’s Conference, themed “Building Faith: United in Christ,” will be held in conjunction with the 37th Biennial Clergy-Laity Congress of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America which begins July 25.

The mission of the Young Adult Ministry is to create a setting to take the spiritual journey of personal growth, to commit to learn about our faith, to minister to one another and to help those in need.  The ministry depends upon the commitment and desire of clergy and laity to learn about and love Christ and His Church by offering their hearts, resources and talents, namely, Worship (Liturgia), Witness (Martyria), Service (Diakonia), and Fellowship (Koinonia), and using  these four characteristics to live a balanced Orthodox Christian life and to grow in His likeness.

The weekend will kick off with a “Red Carpet” Affair on Friday to welcome arriving guests.  On Saturday, a  keynote brunch will  feature Father John Heropoulos of St. Paraskevi in Greenlawn, New York, followed by various workshops and discussions throughout the day. 

Saturday plans include an evening at New York City’s famous South Street Seaport. Later that evening participants will have the opportunity to participate in several late night discussions or participate in a Midnight Run Program, an outreach to deliver food and clothing to homeless people throughout the city.

A  Hierarchical Divine Liturgy concelebrated by His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios and the Holy Synod of Bishops will take place Sunday morning at the hotel. The conference will conclude that evening with the Grand Banquet.

For the first time, a special invitation has being extended to the young adults by the Clergy-Laity Congress to participate in its Monday events. This opportunity is available to all young adults who are registered for the Young Adult Conference.  The Monday Clergy-Laity Program includes the opening keynote breakfast with His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios and educational workshops throughout the day.

For further updates, details, and online registration, please visit our website at www.conference.yal.org.

Contact: 
2004 National Young Adult Conference
Tel: 646.519.6189
E-mail: nyc2004@yal.org



OCMC Spring Board Meeting - A Milestone for Many
April 30, 2004

The Spring 2004 OCMC Board of Trustees Meeting held April 27 to 29, 2004 at St. Mark Greek Orthodox Church in Boca Raton, FL was a milestone for many. For some it was the beginning of a new era and for others it marked the end of a chapter in their lives.

A new era began for a slate of officers who were elected during this meeting for a three-year term. The new officers are Mr. Clifford Argue, President,  Fr. Chad Hatfield, Vice-President,  Fr. Raymond Velencia, Treasurer and Fr. George Liacopulos, Secretary. A chapter ended for Ms. Teresa Polychronis when, after 30 years of service on the OCMC Board, she retired. After being made an honorary member for life, she was visibly moved by the tribute when she was presented with a plaque and a “Go to All Nations” icon by Fr. Alexander Veronis, President Emeritus. Mrs. Catherine Lingas also retired after 18 years of dedicated service and many years on the Executive Committee as Treasurer and Chair of the Finance Committee.

A liturgical service to commission three people as OCMC Missionaries followed the Divine Liturgy celebrated on the last day of the meeting. John Burnett will begin full-time mission service in Uganda later this year and Driko and Christine Pappas will depart for service in Albania by summer 2004. They are three of 11 people who are currently preparing to serve as OCMC Missionaries in Uganda, Hong Kong, Albania, India and Guatemala.
 
Long-time OCMC Missionaries in Romania, Craig and Victoria Goodwin gave a presentation about the mission work they have been doing in Romania over the last seven years, including opening the St. Pantelimon Medical Clinic and a home for abandoned infants called the Protection of the Theotokos Family Center. Another significant presentation was given by Dr. Elizabeth Prodomou on the Status of the Orthodox Church as it relates to American Society. 
 
A highlight of the event was the "Bringing the Light of Christ to All Nations" banquet in which over 200 people attended from many local Orthodox churches. It was a time for those attending to deepen their understanding of the need and impact of Orthodox missions. Fr. Peter Gillquist, OCMC Board Member, renowned author and speaker, as well as the Director of the Department of Missions & Evangelism of the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese, was the keynote speaker.  
 
The OCMC Board of Trustees includes clergy and lay men and women representing all SCOBA jurisdictions. Twice a year they meet in different parts of the country to review the progress of the Mission Center’s programs as they seek to respond to Christ’s command in Matthew 28:19 “Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you.” 



Schedule of Events for His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios for May 13-19, 2004
May 13, 2004


MEDIA ADVISORY
May 12, 2004    

Contact: Nikki Stephanopoulos

May 13-15
Hellenic College/Holy Cross Greek Orthodox
School of Theology
Brookline, MA
Graduation Exercises

May 15
6:30 p.m.
Ellis Island
Archbishop Demetrios will be a recipient of the 2004 Ellis Island Medal of  Honor

May 16
10:00 a.m.
St. Catherine-St. George Church, Astoria
Divine Liturgy and Memorial Service
Archbishop Demetrios assisted by
Bishop Andonios of Phasiane
Pontian Federation of USA and Canada, Day of Remembrance - 1914-1923

12 Noon
Veneration of the Icon of Panaghia Soumela

May 18
10:00 a.m.
ARCHDIOCESE
His Eminence will welcome the newly elected Prime Minister of Greece Constantine Karamanlis

7:00 p.m.
St. Regis Hotel
Reception for Prime Minister Karamanlis, hosted by SAE

May 19
12:30 p.m.
Metropolitan Club
Luncheon in honor of Prime Minister Karamanlis hosted by the US-Greek Business Council and Business Council for International Understanding

7:30 p.m.
Embassy of Greece,  Washington, DC
Reception in honor of Prime Minister Karamanlis

 



Bishop, Adoptive Son: IOCC Having Lasting Impact in Ethiopia
April 30, 2004

When David Mesfin ponders the great needs in Ethiopia, he's glad that International Orthodox Christian Charities (IOCC) is seeking long-term solutions for his homeland.

"The help should be not only in terms of food but also in terms of education - teaching Ethiopians to be more self-sufficient," he said. "Then they can pass that legacy on to the next generation."
    
Mesfin remembers when he first came to America as a 13-year-old Ethiopian boy. It was 1988, and the Ethiopian famine of 1984-1985 was still fresh in people's minds.
    
"People would come up to me and ask, 'How come you don't look as skinny as they do on TV?' " Mesfin recalled. "They thought all of Ethiopia was a drought nation."
    
Fifteen years later, Mesfin, 29, of Long Beach, Calif., doesn't worry about public perceptions of his native land anymore. He's more concerned with helping Ethiopians. That's why he supports the efforts of IOCC to prevent the recurrence of famine in Ethiopia through programs of agricultural and vocational training.
    
In the face of another food crisis in Ethiopia, IOCC currently is expanding its work with the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and other partners. An IOCC project supported by the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs calls for the development of small-scale farms in northern Ethiopia and the training of young people in vocational and agricultural skills.
    
IOCC also is addressing the scourge of HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia with a three-year, $6 million project of prevention, education and hospice care for orphans.
    
Mesfin, a native of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, came to the United States after being adopted by His Grace Bishop Dimitrios (Couchell), ecumenical officer of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America and a longtime supporter of IOCC.
    
Bishop Dimitrios, accompanied by the noted nutritionist Dr. George Christakis, traveled to Ethiopia in 1985 to deliver $160,000 in monetary assistance for the Orthodox Church's famine relief efforts. While there, Bishop Dimitrios learned about Ethiopian children who were attending a Greek-run school in Addis Ababa.
    
"At that time, they asked me to please try to find some parents for these orphans, who were mostly of mixed background," Bishop Dimitrios said.
    
One of those children was Mesfin, whose maternal grandfather was Greek. "The bishop asked me if I was interested [in being adopted], and I said, 'Oh, yeah.' It was an opportunity for me to go to school and to turn around and help my community," Mesfin said.
    
Bishop Dimitrios stayed in Ethiopia for 10 days, visiting refugee centers and orphanages. He laments the fact that IOCC did not exist in 1985, and he still feels a special connection with his adoptive son's homeland today.
    
"It makes me follow events in Ethiopia more closely," he said. "Often I talk with David about the situation, and whenever anything comes across my desk about Ethiopia, I send it to him."
    
Mesfin remembers little about the 1984-1985 famine that took the lives of nearly 1 million Ethiopians. "I was pretty young. Where the famine took place was primarily in the north. It didn't affect us as severely in the city," he said. "It was only after coming to the United States that I found out the true scope of the famine."
    
Dr. Christakis, a specialist in nutrition-related illnesses, said the beauty and fertility of Ethiopia belied the intense suffering he witnessed during the 1985 trip with Bishop Dimitrios. "I came away with the conclusion that Ethiopia, with the right resources, could probably feed all of Africa," he said.
    
Mesfin spent his teen-age years with Bishop Dimitrios in St. Augustine, Fla. "We became like father and son. We're best friends now," said Mesfin, who eventually moved to Southern California to study graphic design.
    
Today, he is president of Visualmorph, a graphic design firm in Torrance, Calif. His mother, brothers, uncles and cousins still live in Ethiopia, and his sister moved to the United States three years ago.
   
Mesfin is active with the Ethiopian community in Los Angeles, raising money for IOCC and other organizations with humanitarian programs in Ethiopia. "I think IOCC is doing the right thing in working with the Orthodox Church in Ethiopia," he said. "You can be more effective, and you'll have a lot more support, by working through the Church."
    
IOCC, the humanitarian aid agency of Orthodox Christians, recently joined seven other international relief agencies in a public call for long-term solutions to break the grip of poverty and recurring famine in Ethiopia.
    
To learn more about IOCC's relief and development programs in Ethiopia and 14 other countries, please visit www.iocc.org.

For media inquiries, please contact IOCC Communications Associate Stephen Huba at 1-877-803-4622 or shuba@iocc.org



Archdiocesan Council Holds Spring Meeting in Chicago
April 28, 2004

The annual Spring Meeting of the Archdiocesan Council of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America was held at the Marriott Downtown Hotel in Chicago, IL on Friday, April 24 and Saturday, April 25, 2004. The Council Meeting began Friday afternoon with an Opening Address by Archbishop Demetrios which included words of thanks to the Hierarchs in attendance and the Council members for their work and dedication to the Archdiocese.

The agenda included review of the detailed work of the Archdiocesan Council Administration Committee in revising the Special Regulations and Uniform Parish Regulations (UPR) to include the roles and responsibilities of the Archdiocese and the Metropolises, and clarify the responsibilities of the Parishes.  This new document, entitled Regulations of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, includes information concerning Real Estate Guidelines, a Conflict of Interest Policy and a Policy dealing with Dispute Resolution.   The Regulations document was prepared by the Administration Committee over the past year using the current Charter and UPR.  The Committee considered UPR related Resolutions from Local Councils and Metropolis Assemblies.  Also, the Committee sought to work in consultation and cooperation with the church organizations familiar with the current issues our Church must address, by requesting input from the chancellors of the Metropolises, the Archdiocesan Benefits Committee, the Retired Clergy Association, the Presbyter’s Council and the Finance Committee of the Archdiocesan Council.   

Mr. Anthony Stefanis, Chairman of the Administration Committee commented, “These Regulations were developed to clarify the role and responsibilities of clergy and laity at all levels of our Archdiocese and to focus specifically on governance and accountability.” 

Comments have been requested from members of the Archdiocesan Council and from the Hierarchs of the Holy Synod and will be incorporated into a final document that will be reviewed at a special meeting of the Archdiocesan Council in June.  The Regulations will then be distributed to the delegates for discussion and adoption by the full body of the 37th Biennial Clergy-Laity Congress, scheduled for July 25-29 in New York City.  The Regulations will then be forwarded to the Ecumenical Patriarchate for approval as provided for in the 2003 Charter of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. 

Following this discussion, the Archdiocesan Council, after hearing Mr. Emanuel Demos, Legal Counsel of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, comment on the matter of the Lawsuit filed by certain individuals against the Archdiocese, unanimously adopted the following resolution:

WHEREAS, certain individuals have filed a lawsuit in the Supreme Court of the State of New York against the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America and Archbishop Demetrios which is unacceptable on both canonical and ecclesiastical grounds and does not represent the views or desires of the faithful across the country, and

WHEREAS, the members of the Archdiocesan Council, representing the faithful across the country acknowledge the absolute validity of the 2003 Charter,

NOW THEREFORE IT IS HEREBY RESOLVED:

The Council adopts by reference the resolutions passed by the local Assemblies of San Francisco, New York and New Jersey, and by the Council of the Denver Metropolis (being the only meetings that occurred after the commencement of the Lawsuit), and it is further resolved,

That those Plaintiffs in the Lawsuit are requested to reconsider their actions and remove their names as Plaintiffs in the Lawsuit, and further,

That they use their best efforts to obtain the dismissal of the Lawsuit at the earliest, and further,

That our clergy is requested to pastorally approach the plaintiffs to assist them in understanding that they are misinformed regarding the full process that was taken in granting the 2003 Charter.



Act of the Major Holy and Sacred Resident Synod Convened in Phanar
May 10, 2004


Following is the translation of the Protocol No. 384 Act of the Major Holy and Sacred Resident Synod Convened at the Phanar on April 30, 2004, which accompanied the original Greek text.

Protocol Number 384

Holy Canons ordain that actions which certainly cause harm to canonical order and infringe upon it, in constituting an encroachment on the canonical territory of another Church, should be decried and condemned.

For according to Holy Scripture and the Fathers of the Church, order holds all things celestial and terrestrial together. All are duty-bound to maintain good order for it is the constitutive and cohesive element of peace: especially those presiding over the Churches, who, in full awareness of their own measure and bounds should remain within them. The holy canons of the Church, in perennial concord, enjoin that “a Bishop should not venture to effect ordinations outside of his own bounds in the townships and lands that are not subject to him, against the authority of those that hold such townships or lands”. Those who operate and act beyond their bounds are to be dealt with severely (35th Canon of the Holy Apostles, 2nd canon of the second Ecumenical Council, and others that concur), since by such encroachments on the provinces of others they drive away concord and good order, and confuse the Churches by becoming the tutors and perpetrators of disorder.

The Most Holy Church of Greece, which in the first place wilfully and against the canons seceded from the Constantinopolitan Holy and Great Church of Christ   and presented a bad example to other Churches, realized with the passage of time the crooked path on which she was embarked and contritely asked that she regain the straight and orderly path. Thus on the basis of ecclesiastical and canonical arrangements, the Ecumenical Patriarchate granted her independence and autocephaly by the Patriarchal and Synodical Tome of 1850, which as her supreme ecclesiastical authority designated not some primate but a Permanent Synod, to be mentioned by the Hierarchs of Greece, whilst its President, the Metropolitan of Athens is not vested with the privileges of the head and primate of a church, but with those of the president of a local Synod, the Ecumenical Patriarch remaining her primate, to whom “the Holy Synod of Greece [should] refer on ecclesiastical matters that concern both and require joint deliberations and joint action ..., and the Ecumenical Patriarch with the Holy and Sacred Synod about Him willingly vouchsafes his participation, announcing what must be to the Holy Synod of the Church of Greece”. The Holy Synod of the new Autocephalous Church obtained full authority to regulate affairs pertaining to internal ecclesiastical administration by Conciliar Acts provided they would not contravene the Holy Canons of the Holy and Sacred Councils or the patrimony of traditional usage or the formulae of the Orthodox Eastern Church.

Then the Septinsular provinces initially, followed by the provinces of Thessaly were fully annexed to the Autocephalus Most Holy Church of Greece, so that “they should be spoken of, and be known by all as conjoined and attached to her, and as being an inalienable part of her” by the Patriarchal and Conciliar Acts of 1866 and of 1882 respectively, which released them from any dependence under the Ecumenical Throne.

But subsequently, after the disaster of Asia Minor and the flight or exchange of populations, as times and circumstances took a turn for the worse, and threatened the very existence of the Holy Great Church of Christ, this common Mother and protectress of the Orthodox, no longer able to give a gift of her own without incurring danger, made other arrangements in respect of the Provinces of the so-called New Lands by means of an Act appropriate to the occasion and circumstances, with the consent of those in charge of the Race, so that the Mother who from the beginning has born fair progeny, who has thrived as a vine in the gables of the house of the Lord and has lavishly and unstintingly provided, by diminishing her own but not thereby becoming destitute, so that she might wither not and perish not but continue to perform her role as the Church with the prime throne amongst the Orthodox, ministering to their unity and commonweal, and continuously, through history as well as in the present, magnifying the Race of the Greeks and of the Orthodox generally. If other nations possessed this most ancient, unique and majestic institution of the Ecumenical Throne they would do their utmost to reinforce it and to increase its status and its influence.

Therefore to this purpose the ecclesiastical provinces that have been mentioned of Crete, the New Lands and the Dodecanese, to which should be added the Holy Mountain Athos and the other Holy Patriarchal and Stavropegic Monasteries in Greece continue under various degrees of dependence to constitute canonical territory of the Church of Constantinople which, until now, has not ceded her full jurisdiction over them to any other Church , nor is she intending so to do. They all lie within the canonical boundaries of the Church of Constantinople. In consequence, the person who proceeds with elections and ordinations of Bishops without the opinion and consent and agreement of the Ecumenical Patriarchate,  who acts thus arbitrarily and without invitation, perpetrates the most grievous canonical offence of acting beyond his bounds and outside his see, thus encroaching on another’s provinces, and usurping and robbing another’s rights.

 Now, wherefore His Beatitude Christodoulos, our brother the Archbishop of Athens, from the moment of his accession to the Archiepiscopal Throne of Athens, repeatedly and frequently did wilfully transgress against the Patriarchal and Synodical Tome of 1850 on the one hand, by seeking to be mentioned as Primate both within the Autocephalous Church of Greece and in the New Lands without the concurring opinion of the Holy Great Church of Christ, and against the Patriarchal and Synodical Act of 1928 on the other hand by failing to observe its Terms and, despite the express and stated objection of the Ecumenical Throne, by intervening arbitrarily with the ordination of Bishops in those provinces, wherein the supreme canonical rights of the most sacred Ecumenical Throne remain entire, and wherefore by all he does, despite the warnings and canonical claims of the Mother Church, he persists in disorder, and harms himself and the pleroma of the Church, becoming thus the cause of scandal and division in the Hierarchy and the laity, and therefore, in order to arrest any further progress of this evil, and in the hope of achieving the  swift restoration of canonical order which has been disturbed:

a) we deem the recent elections and translations to be invalid, having been held and effected in violation of the specific Terms of the Act of 4 September 1928, through acts passing beyond proper bounds and impinging within an another’s jurisdiction, and consequently un-canonically, and the holy sees of Thessaloniki, Eleftheroupolis, and Servia and Kozani still vacant;

b) with unutterable sadness and pain we resolve the interruption of communion with His Beatitude Christodoulos, Archbishop of Athens, his name being stricken from the Diptychs of our Holy Great Church of Christ, and himself being rendered unable to commune with us, or with the clergy and monks who are subject to our Church, either in worship or in administration;

c) we enjoin those thus “elected” not to assume their provinces: otherwise  communion will be interrupted with them as well;

d) we earnestly beg the Honourable Hellenic State not to assist in the dissolution of canonical order by the promulgation of the pertinent Presidential Decrees;

e) we express the most intense displeasure and sorrow of the Mother Church to those Hierarchs of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, fortunately few in number, who assisted in the “ordinations” of those thus elected; and

f) we make it known that in the event that this canonical anomaly should continue, the Ecumenical Patriarchate will be forced to proceed with the abrogation of the Patriarchal and Synodical Act of 1928.

Thereupon in proof and attestation of the foregoing this, our present Patriarchal and Synodical Act was done, drawn up in this Sacred Codex of our Holy Great Church of Christ.

In the year 2004, the 30th in the month of April
XII in the epinemesis

+ Bartholomeos of Constantinople
+ Chrysostomos of Ephessos
+ Photios of Heraclea
+ Ioannis of Nicaea
+ Aemilianos of Cos
+ Demetrios of America
+ Evangelos of Pergi
+ Kallinikos of Lystra
+ Gregorios of Thyateira and Great Britain
+ Gennadios of Italy
+ Jeremias of Switzerland
+ Constantinos of Derkai
+ Germanos of Theodoroupolis
+ Avgoustinos of Germany
+ Athanassios of Helioupolis and Theira
+ Germanos of Tranoupolis
+ Pavlos of Sweden and all Scandinavia
+ Panteleimon of Tyroloe and Serention
+ Panteleimon of Belgium
+ Eirinaios of Cydonia and Apokoronos
+ Nectarios of Leros and Kalymnos
+ Chrysostomos of Syme
+ Amvrosios of Karpathos and Kasos
+ Cyrillos of Imvros and Tenedos
+ Apostolos of Miletos
+ Michael of Austria
+ Ioannis of Pergamon
+ Iacovos of Pringeponnesa
+ Eirinaios of Lambi, Syvritos and Sfakia
+ Nectarios of Petra and Cherronesos
+ Meliton of Philadelphia
+ Demetrios of Sevasteia
+ Soterios of Korea
+ Evgenios of Hierapytna and Seteia
+ Eirinaios of Myriophyton and Peristasis
+ Apostolos of Moschonisia
+ Anthimos of Rethymnon and Avlopotamos
+ Emmanuel of France
+ Theoleptos of Iconium
+ Andreas of Arkalochorion
+ Epiphanios of Spain and Portugal
+ Cyrillos of Rhodes



Korean Orthodox Church Becomes Separate Metropolis; Begins Dialogue With New Orthodox Group in North Korea
May 10, 2004

The week of April 19th turned out to be an especially momentous one for the Orthodox Church in Korea as two major events took place. The bishop and a senior priest went to North Korea to have a dialogue with leaders of the recently formed Orthodox community for the capital city of Pyung-Yang(Pyongyang). At the same time, the Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople elevated the Church in Korea to a separate Metropolis and the bishop to a Metropolitan.

From April 20 to 22, His Grace Bishop Sotirios (Trambas), who has served in Korea as a missionary priest from Greece since 1975, and Protopresbyter Daniel Na, pastor of St. Paul Orthodox Church in Incheon, journeyed into the normally closed country of North Korea.  They met with the Chairman Mr. Il Jin Huh (George) and Vice Chairman Mr. Chul Kim (Peter) of the organization which is building the Holy Trinity Orthodox Church in Dong-Baik Dong, Pyung-Yang City to discuss mutual cooperation.  The church is scheduled to open in April 2005.
 
Mr. Huh and Mr. Kim are likely the first native Orthodox Christians in North Korea in many years.  They were baptized in January in Moscow where four other North Koreans are now studying to become Orthodox priests next year.  Orthodoxy was welcomed into the North following a visit some months ago by the country’s leader to the Russian Far East where he toured Orthodox churches.
 
A member of the St. Nicholas Orthodox Cathedral in Seoul reported that on his way in to North Korea, Bishop Sotirios had his cell phone confiscated at the border.  They returned it only when he left to go back to South Korea.  As a result, the hierarch was out of contact and did not know that half way around the world, the Holy Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople had created the new Metropolis of Korea, formerly under the Metropolis of New Zealand, and elevated His Grace to be its first Metropolitan.
 
“Word had reached the church here in Seoul,” wrote the cathedral member, “and an impromptu celebration was held on his return Thursday night.  His Grace was informed of the news on his way back to the cathedral.”
 
The enthronement of His Eminence Metropolitan Sotirios will be held on June 20 in the St. Nicholas Cathedral in Seoul.  For more information, see the Church website at www.orthodox.or.kr
 
Founded by Russian missionaries in 1900, the Orthodox Church in Korea maintained the faith despite very difficult times throughout its history.  The long Japanese occupation of Korea after the Russo-Japanese War, World War II, and especially the Korean War caused great hardships for the Church.  Buildings were destroyed and clergy and laity were scattered and in some cases captured and taken to prison camps, never to return. 
 
The Church was reborn thanks to the efforts of Orthodox chaplains serving with elements of the Greek Army stationed in Korea at the end of the Korean War.  The Ecumenical Patriarchate took the Korean Orthodox Church  under its protection in 1956 after the petition by the members of the Orthodox Church in Korea during their General Assembly. More specifically the Holy Synod put the Church under the jurisdiction of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of North and South America.  The Archdiocese provided some support, visits by clergy and hierarchs, and assignment of a missionary priest.
 
In 1970, the Orthodox Church in Korea was placed under the Archdiocese of New Zealand, and its hierarch Metropolitan Dionysios where it has remained until the elevation.  America continued to assist through the Greek Archdiocese Missions Office which became the Orthodox Christian Mission Center (OCMC). Among the significant support provided was assistance in the education of clergy such as Fr. Daniel Na at Holy Cross Seminary in Brookline.
 
Following the arrival of then Father Sotirios in 1975, who was consecrated a bishop in 1993, the Church in Korea has grown from a single small parish in Seoul to six communities throughout the country, each with its own building. Today there are seven local Korean clergymen, one priest from Greece, one priest from Russia, a monastery with one nun and a novice, and over 2500 faithful. His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew has visited Korea twice in recent years (1995 and 2000), and much help has come from Greece with volunteers and donations.
 
There is a great opportunity for Orthodox in America to help the Church in Korea. For the first time this year, the Orthodox Christian Mission Center is sending a short-term Mission Team to Korea.  This OCMC Mission Team  will assist in the construction of an Orthodox community center in Chuncheon, as well as witness in several church areas in Korea from August 20 to September 13. The community center is located in a rural village with many elderly residents without families. It is also located near a large city and will serve as outreach to both areas. Volunteers with building skills and/or theological education as well as others are needed for this team. For more information, contact teams@ocmc.org or call (904) 829-5132 or 1-877-GO FORTH (463-6784).



Email this Page Printer Friendly Version