Saints Cyril
& Methodius
Bulgarian Orthodox
Mission

All
Saints of North America
Sunday,
June 6, 2010
2:00
PM
Held at:
St. Luke Orthodox Church
6801 Georgetown Pike, McLean, VA 22101
His Beatitude, Metropolitan JONAH
The Very Reverend Archpriest Timothy Perry
The Rev. Deacon Chterion Zaprionov
2010 PARISH
COUNCIL
Saints
Cyril and Methodius Bulgarian Orthodox Mission
Mr. Evgeniy Anguelov, President
Mr. George Kochev, Vice-President
Mrs. Elena Murphy, Treasurer
Mr. Larry Woods, Secretary
Ms. Nadiya Baltiyska
Ms. Lazarina Petrova
Mrs. Nadya Choparinoff
Upcoming Service
Schedule:
Services at
SS Cyril & Methodius Mission begin at 2:00
Services
at St. George Church begin at 12:00
June 6 – All Saints of North America, at SS Cyril & Methodius
Mission
June 13 – 3rd Sunday after Pentecost, at St.
George Church
June
20 – 4th Sunday after Pentecost, at SS Cyril & Methodius Mission
Saints
Commemorated Today
2nd SUNDAY AFTER PENTECOST — Tone 1. All Saints
of America (All Saints of Russia). Martyr Julian of
Tarsus in Cilicia (3rd-4th c.). Hieromartyr Terence
(Tertius), Bishop of Iconium (1st c.). St. Julius, Presbyter of
Novara, and his brother, St. Julian the Deacon (5th c.). Martyrs
Archil II (744) and Luarsab II (1622), Kings of Georgia.
The
Next SS Cyril & Methodius Parish Council Meeting
The next Parish
Council Meeting will take place on, June 20 following the Divine Liturgy.
Everyone is invited to attend and listen or discuss the issues, however,
only Parish Council members may cast a vote.
†
May Their Memory Be Eternal †
The
newly departed servants ,
the
Priests Peter, Ishmael, Michael, Leo, Homer, Thomas, and Victor;
the
Matushki Mary, Platonida, Sophronia, and Barbara;
the
Readers Philemon, John, John, and Robert Michael; and
the
Servants of God Maria, Megan, Georgi, Bojanka, Magdalena, Alexander, Sophia,
Shafik, Christo, Julia, Rada, Radka, Anna, Dale, Olivera, Marianthe, Panaigioti,
& George.
Those
Who Are In Need of Prayer
The Priests Photius,
Anthony, Milorad, Vadim, and Joseph;
the Presbyteras
Artemis, Marie, Miriam, Juliana, Anne, & Alexandra;
the servants of God John,
Alexandra, Victor, Erin, Catherine, Mathew, Venko, Tanya, Vera, Kyriaki,
Yekaterina, Sasha, John, Carmeta, Charlie, Helen, and Patricia.
Those who are
traveling or are sick and suffering and those who have asked us to pray for
them, unworthy though we may be.
All Saints of North America
On the second Sunday
after Pentecost, each local Orthodox Church commemorates all the saints, known
and unknown, who have shone forth in its territory. Accordingly, the Orthodox
Church in America remembers the saints of North America on this day.
Saints of all times, and
in every country are seen as the fulfillment of God's promise to redeem fallen
humanity. Their example encourages us to "lay aside every weight, and the
sin which so easily besets us" and to "run with patience the race
that is set before us" (Hebrews 12:1). The saints of North America also
teach us how we should live, and what we must expect to endure as Christians
Although it is a
relatively young church, the Orthodox Church in America has produced saints in
nearly all of the six major categories of saints: Apostles (and Equals of the
Apostles); Martyrs (and Confessors); Prophets; Hierarchs; Monastic Saints; and
the Righteous. Prophets, of course, lived in Old Testament times and predicted
the coming of Christ.
The first Divine Liturgy
in what is now American territory (northern latitude 58 degrees, 14 minutes,
western longitude 141 degrees) was celebrated on July 20, 1741, the Feast of
the Prophet Elias, aboard the ship Peter under the command of Vitus Bering.
Hieromonk Hilarion Trusov and the priest Ignatius Kozirevsky served together on
that occasion. Several years later, the Russian merchant Gregory I. Shelikov
visited Valaam monastery, suggesting to the abbot that it would be desirable to
send missionaries to Russian America.
On September 24, 1794,
after a journey of 7,327 miles (the longest missionary journey in Orthodox
history) and 293 days, a group of monks from Valaam arrived on Kodiak Island in
Alaska. The mission was headed by Archimandrite Joasaph, and included Hieromonks
Juvenal, Macarius, and Athanasius, the Hierodeacons Nectarius and Stephen, and
the monks Herman and Joasaph. St Herman of Alaska (December 13, August 9), the
last surviving member of the mission, fell asleep in the Lord in 1837.
Throughout the Church's
history, the seeds of faith have always been watered by the blood of the
martyrs. The Protomartyr Juvenal was killed near Lake Iliamna by natives in
1799, thus becoming the first Orthodox Christian to shed his blood for Christ
in the New World. In 1816, St Peter the Aleut was put to death by Spanish
missionaries in California when he refused to convert to Roman Catholicism.
Missionary efforts
continued in the nineteenth century, with outreach to the native peoples of
Alaska. Two of the most prominent laborers in Christ's Vineyard were St
Innocent Veniaminov (March 31 and October 6) and St Jacob Netsvetov (July 26),
who translated Orthodox services and books into the native languages. Father
Jacob Netsvetev died in Sitka in 1864 after a life of devoted service to the
Church. Father John Veniaminov, after his wife's death, received monastic
tonsure with the name Innocent. He died in 1879 as the Metropolitan of Moscow.
As the nineteenth
century was drawing to a close, an event of enormous significance for the North
American Church took place. On March 25, 1891, Bishop Vladimir went to
Minneapolis to receive St Alexis Toth (May 7) and 361 of his parishioners into
the Orthodox Church. This was the beginning of the return of many Uniates to
Orthodoxy.
St Tikhon (Belavin), the
future Patriarch of Moscow (April 7, October 9), came to America as bishop of
the diocese of the Aleutians and Alaska in September 1898. As the only Orthodox
bishop on the continent, St Tikhon traveled extensively throughout North America
in order to minister to his widely scattered and diverse flock. He realized
that the local church here could not be a permanent extension of the Russian
Church. Therefore, he focused his efforts on giving the American Church a
diocesan and parish structure which would help it mature and grow.
St Tikhon returned to
Russia in 1907, and was elected as Patriarch of Moscow ten years later. He died
in 1925, and for many years his exact burial place remained unknown. St
Tikhon's grave was discovered on February 22, 1992 in the smaller cathedral of
Our Lady of the Don in the Don Monastery when a fire made renovation of the
church necessary.
St Raphael of Brooklyn
(February 27) was the first Orthodox bishop to be consecrated in North America.
Archimandrite Raphael Hawaweeny was consecrated by Bishop Tikhon and Bishop
Innocent (Pustynsky) at St Nicholas Cathedral in New York on March 13, 1904. As
Bishop of Brooklyn, St Raphael was a trusted and capable assistant to St Tikhon
in his archpastoral ministry. St Raphael reposed on February 27, 1915.
The first All American
Council took place March 5-7, 1907 at Mayfield, PA, and the main topic was
"How to expand the mission." Guidelines and directions for missionary
activity, and statutes for the administrative structure of parishes were also
set forth.
In the twentieth
century, in the aftermath of the Russian Revolution, countless men, women, and
children received the crown of martyrdom rather than renounce Christ. Sts John
Kochurov (October 31) and Alexander Hotovitzky (December 4 and August 7) both
served the Church in North America before going back to Russia. St John became
the first clergyman to be martyred in Russia on October 31, 1917 in St
Petersburg. St Alexander Hotovitzky, who served in America until 1914, was
killed in 1937.
In addition to the
saints listed above, we also honor those saints who are known only to God, and
have not been recognized officially by the Church. As we contemplate the lives
of these saints, let us remember that we are also called by God to a life of
holiness.)