Week of March 24

Brothers and Sisters,

Greetings in the Name of the Lord. 

On Tuesday, March 25, we will be celebrating the Feast of the Annunciation. We will offer Great Vespers on Monday, March 24 at 7pm, and on Tuesday, the day of the feast, we will offer Orthros at 5am and Divine Liturgy at 7am. Plan on joining us as we honor the Mother of God with this beautiful celebration.

Our Calendar

Fasting Days

During Great Lent, the full fast calls on us to go without meat, dairy products, fish with backbones, oil, wine, and hard liquor. There is a blessing for fish, wine, and oil on certain feast days (the Annunciation, for example). Women who are pregnant or nursing, children who are still growing, and folks who have specific medial requirements are not expected or encouraged to keep the full fast, but all of us can fast in some way. Please check with your sponsor or spiritual father if you need to adjust the fast.

Daily Services

Monday, March 24-Friday, March 28: Orthros 5am; Vespers 5pm (but please note there will not be daily vespers on Monday or Wednesday; it’s always a good idea to check the day before and make sure nothing has come up to change the regular schedule).

However, Fr. Andrew, Seth Hart, and many other folks continue to broadcast daily readings from spiritual books online.  They are now reading “The Orthodox Faith” by St John of Damascus. The schedule is as follows: M-F at 12pm.

In addition to the daily Synaxarion readings posted in the #synaxarion channel on Discord, the online team is now posting daily Bible Readings that will allow you to read through the Bible in a year. These readings are posted in the #bible-365 channel.

Monday, March 24

  • Great Vespers 7pm

Tuesday, March 25

The Feast of the Annunciation

  • Orthros 5am

  • Divine Liturgy 7am

  • Inquirer’s 101 7pm; you can also access the group on Discord

  • The Parish Council 7pm

Wednesday, March 26

  • The Pre-Sanctified Liturgy 7pm

Thursday, March 27

There will not be any Bible Study this week; the New Testament Edition will return next Thursday at 7pm

Friday, March 28

  • The Akathist Hymn 7pm

Saturday, March 29

  • St Thomas School 4pm

  • Great Vespers 6pm

Sunday, March 30

The Fourth Sunday of Great Lent

  • Orthros 7:30am

  • Divine Liturgy 10am

  • 5th Sunday Potluck Noon

Monday, March 31

  • Great Compline 7pm

Tuesday April 1

  • Inquirer’s 101 7pm; you can also access the group on Discord

Wednesday, April 2

  • Small Compline with The Canon of St Andrew 7pm

Thursday, April 3

  • The Bible Study, New Testament Edition 7pm; you can access this group on Discord 

 Friday, April 4

  • The Akathist Hymn 7pm

Saturday, April 5

  • St Thomas School 4pm

  • Great Vespers 6pm

Sunday, April 6

The Fifth Sunday of Great Lent

  • Orthros 8am

  • Church School 8:15am

  • Divine Liturgy 10am

  • Fellowship Hour Noon

Anniversary / Memorial Blessings

You can use the links in the email version of the newsletter to sign up for anniversary blessings and memorial services that will be offered in 2025. Please note that things have changed for 2025 to accommodate our growing parish (i.e. some were not able to get on the schedule for anniversary blessings in 2024 because all of the slots were taken).

Memorial Services, will now occur at the end of Great Vespers on Saturday, and they may only be offered for Orthodox Christians who have departed this life. If your departed loved one was not an Orthodox Christian, visit this page on our website to learn about and request an Akathist for the Departed rather than signing up for a memorial service.

Anniversary Blessings may be requested for the first wedding anniversary and every fifth anniversary thereafter (i.e. 1st, 5th, 10th, 15th, 20th, 25th, etc.). They may only be offered if one of the married couple is an Orthodox Christian. Approach the solea immediately after the hymn “Blessed be the Name of the Lord” at the end of the Divine Liturgy. If you have marriage crowns, bring them with you as you come forward. Those celebrating anniversaries that are not eligible to sign up, are invited to come forward during the “Birthdays, Anniversaries, and Namedays” segment of the announcements after the Divine Liturgy.

Financial Update

Thanks to the faithfulness of the Most Holy Trinity, and your generosity, we ended February with a surplus of $1,700. Of course, that’s just a small snapshot of a situation that changes daily, so, if you’d like to know more details, just ask any of our Finance Folks, Ray W., Jennifer R., or Father Aidan. Also, we not only need to make sure that we are current in our giving to the parish, but, if we are all caught up, we need to consider contributing a little extra, just to help out those folks who are not able to give what they had hoped.

Coming Up

This coming Sunday, March 30, is a fifth Sunday. That means we’re going to have a Fifth Sunday Potluck. Those potlucks always work a whole lot better if we all bring food, so just break out your best Lenten recipes, bring enough to share, and, when the potluck is over, please plan on pitching in and helping out with picking up the grounds and cleaning up the kitchen.

Great Lent is a good time to do some spiritual reading. This year, during the Pascha Book Study, we will be using a short book called The Passions of the Soul. That book is already available at Christ the Lightgiver, so why not pick up a copy, read through it slowly during Great Lent, and you’ll be ready to go when the book study begins on the Wednesday of Bright Week. Benedict H. will be leading the Pascha Book Study, and here’s what he has to say about the book and the event: “For the Pascha Book Study, we’ll be studying Rowan Williams’ Passions of the Soul. Williams, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, is one of the premier Western scholars of the Eastern spiritual tradition. With Williams’ help, we’ll investigate what the fathers can teach us about the passions and how we can overcome them.”

The Church calls on us to make our confession during Great Lent. At St John’s, we hear confessions on Saturday evening following Great Vespers. There is a list in the narthex, you put your name on the list, and you make your confession with whichever priest calls your name. If Saturday night does not work for you, or if you wish to make your confession with a specific priest, then you can make an appointment during the week with that clergyman. However, we do not hear confessions during Holy Week, so we all need to go ahead and participate in that Holy Mystery before Lazarus Saturday, which, this year, falls on April 12 (and which is rapidly approaching).

Finally, the Church expects us to increase our giving during Great Lent. Of course, we should first check and make sure that we are up to date with our current commitment to the parish budget, but, if we are, then we should consider giving a little more to help out all those who aren’t able to contribute as much as they had anticipated, or we should think about making a special gift to the Building Fund during this season of spiritual striving.

Our Moment of Grace and Courtesy

It’s time to start preparing for Pascha! Here’s the first of our Annual Paschal Moments of Grace and Courtesy:

During the Paschal Services on Saturday night/Sunday morning, if young children need to sleep, then they must be A) in the parish house with a family member or friend, or B) held in the arms or on the lap of a family member in the nave. Please do not, under any circumstances, allow your children to sleep or lie down on the floor of the nave, the narthex, the cry room, or the kitchen. This is not safe, and our ushers have been instructed to remind parents and grandparents that children are not allowed to sleep or lie down in these locations. Also, please remember that if your children are going to sleep in the parish house, there must be a family member with them at all times; they are not to be left alone for any reason.

an unworthy priest

aidan