Saint George Orthodox Church
A Parish of the Diocese of Toledo and the Midwest of the Self-Ruled Antiochian Christian Orthodox Archdiocese of North America

Christ is in our Midst!

He is and ever shall be!

January 28th to February 7th

Evening Divine Liturgy for the Three Holy Hierarchs has been changed from Thursday, January 29th to Friday evening, January 30th beginning at 6pm at the Assumption Orthodox Church (3170 Beecher Road 1/4 mile west of Ballenger Highway).  We will all have an opportunity to meet the new pastor at Assumption, Fr. Angelo and his wife Terry! 

Divine Services
  • On Saturdays, Great Vespers and Confessions will be celebrated as normal beginning at 5pm.
  • On Sundays, Divine Services will take place as normal with Matins beginning at 8:50am followed by Divine Liturgy at 10am.
  • On Monday evening, February 2nd, we will be celebrating the Great Feast of the Presentation of our Lord into the Temple with Divine Liturgy beginning at 6pm at the Assumption Orthodox Church. 
    
Fasting Discipline
  • The traditional fasting discipline (no meat, poultry, eggs, dairy, fish, wine and oil) is observed on Wednesdays and Fridays.  
 
Events

  • Godparent Sunday, February 15th!  A wonderful day is being planned so our Godparents and their Godchildren can "reconnect".  This is a great time to be able to participate in the Sacrament of Holy Communion together.  If you are in need of the Sacrament of Repentance (Confession), please come on Saturdays after Great Vespers, which begins at 5pm, Sundays from 8:30am-9:30am, or by appointment during the week.  A delicious Spaghetti Lunch will take place afterwards sponsored by our Ladies Auxiliary.  Plan ahead and plan on being there! 
  • 2009 Offering Form  We have been asking all of our 249 families to fill out their form and send it to the church.  The minimum suggested offering should be at least 3% of your income with the understanding that the goal for Orthodox Christians is to follow our Lord's command of offering 10% of our income to His Church!  Please remember this when filling out your form so we can reach our Offering Goal and 2009 Budget of $219,810 -- thank you!
  • Restoration/Improvement Fund   Everyone received a letter about this new fundraiser.  All families are asked to offering a minimum of $100 each for needed upkeep of our Church Complex.  When making this offering, please remember it is above and beyond your regular offerings.   
  • Our Book Club will be having their monthly meeting on Thursday, February 5th beginning at 7pm.  The current book is On the Incarnation by St. Athanasius.  If you are interested in attending or would like more information, please contact Deacon Michael at FrDnMike@chartermi.net
  • Our Young Adult Fellowship -- 19 years to 25 years old -- will be having their next gathering on Saturday, February 7th beginning at 1:30pm.  Jenny Abueita (jcabueit@svsu.edu) is coordinating this and she can provide more information. 
  • Our Bible Studies (Monday mornings in English 10am-12pm and Tuesday afternoons in Arabic/English 12:30pm-2pm) will take place as normal.  This year we are studying the Gospel of St. John.  All are welcome to attend to learn more about our God and our Orthodox Faith!

  
Announcements

  • 2009 Summer Camp at the Antiochian Village.  Our church attends the 2nd Session (June 28th-July 10th), but you can sign-up whatever session works for you.  Please don't wait to sign-up, the sessions fill quickly -- do it TODAY!   If you do not have a credit card, which you need to register, please contact me.  Please bring $100 (cash or check) for the each camper's deposit and I'll get you registered.  Checks can be made out to St. George.Kitchen Cleaning   Our Ladies Auxiliary has graciously taken on the task of getting professional cleaners to clean from top to bottom!  The cost was over $1,800.  They only ask that when you use any items in the kitchen or from the storeroom, you clean and put them where you found them.  Many of our church groups and individual parishioners use the kitchen.  Only by working together, can we keep it in the right condition.
  • Tonight, and every Wednesday, is SOYO Wednesday from 7-9pm.  Our teens have a great time being with each other, playing games, watching TV or a movie, and/or doing their homework.  For more information, please contact our SOYO president, Tamer Abuaita (tabuaita@aim.com).
  • Below is a summary of the life of St. Ephraim the Syrian which we celebrate today that comes from the web site of the Orthodox Church in America (St. Nicholas and St. Mary Magdalene's archdiocese) at http://www.oca.org/.
 
God bless you and be with you always!
Love,
Fr. Joe

Saint Ephraim the Syrian (1/28), a teacher of repentance, was born at the beginning of the fourth century in the city of Nisibis (Mesopotamia) into the family of impoverished toilers of the soil. His parents raised their son in piety, but from his childhood he was known for his quick temper and impetuous character. He often had fights, acted thoughtlessly, and even doubted God's Providence. He finally recovered his senses by the grace of God, and embarked on the path of repentance and salvation.

Once, he was unjustly accused of stealing a sheep and was thrown into prison. He heard a voice in a dream calling him to repent and correct his life. After this, he was acquitted of the charges and set free.

The young man ran off to the mountains to join the hermits. This form of Christian asceticism had been introduced by a disciple of St Anthony the Great, the Egyptian desert dweller Eugenius.

St James of Nisibis (January 13) was a noted ascetic, a preacher of Christianity and denouncer of the Arians. St Ephraim became one of his disciples. Under the direction of the holy hierarch, St Ephraim attained Christian meekness, humility, submission to God's will, and the strength to undergo various temptations without complaint.

St James transformed the wayward youth into a humble and contrite monk. Realizing the great worth of his disciple, he made use of his talents. He trusted him to preach sermons, to instruct children in school, and he took Ephraim with him to the First Ecumenical Council at Nicea (in the year 325). St Ephraim was in obedience to St James for fourteen years, until the bishop's death in 338.

After the capture of Nisibis by the Persians in 363, St Ephraim went to a monastery near the city of Edessa. Here he saw many great ascetics, passing their lives in prayer and psalmody. Their caves were solitary shelters, and they fed themselves with a certain plant.

He became especially close to the ascetic Julian (October 18), who was of one mind with him. St Ephraim combined asceticism with a ceaseless study of the Word of God, taking from it both solace and wisdom for his soul. The Lord gave him a gift of teaching, and people began to come to him, wanting to hear his counsel, which produced compunction in the soul, since he began with self-accusation. Both verbally and in writing, St Ephraim instructed everyone in repentance, faith and piety, and he denounced the Arian heresy, which at that time was causing great turmoil. Pagans who heard the preaching of the saint were converted to Christianity.

He also wrote the first Syriac commentary on the Pentateuch (i.e. the first "Five Books" of the Old Testament) of Moses. He wrote many prayers and hymns, thereby enriching the Church's liturgical services. Famous prayers of St Ephraim are to the Most Holy Trinity, to the Son of God, and to the Most Holy Theotokos. He composed hymns for the Twelve Great Feasts of the Lord (the Nativity of Christ, the Baptism, the Resurrection), and funeral hymns. St Ephraim's Prayer of Repentance, "O Lord and Master of my life...", is recited during the Great Fast, and it summons Christians to spiritual renewal.

From ancient times the Church has valued the works of St Ephraim. His works were read publicly in certain churches after the Holy Scripture, as St Jerome tells us. At present, the Church Typikon prescribes certain of his instructions to be read on the days of Lent. Among the prophets, St David is the preeminent psalmodist; among the Fathers of the Church, St Ephraim the Syrian is the preeminent man of prayer. His spiritual experience made him a guide for monastics and a help to the pastors of Edessa. St Ephraim wrote in Syriac, but his works were very early translated into Greek and Armenian. Translations into Latin and Slavonic were made from the Greek text.

In many of St Ephraim's works we catch glimpses of the life of the Syrian ascetics, which was centered on prayer and working in various obediences for the common good of the brethren. The outlook of all the Syrian ascetics was the same. The monks believed that the goal of their efforts was communion with God and the acquisition of divine grace. For them, the present life was a time of tears, fasting and toil.

"If the Son of God is within you, then His Kingdom is also within you. Thus, the Kingdom of God is within you, a sinner. Enter into yourself, search diligently and without toil you shall find it. Outside of you is death, and the door to it is sin. Enter into yourself, dwell within your heart, for God is there."

Constant spiritual sobriety, the developing of good within man's soul gives him the possibility to take upon himself a task like blessedness, and a self-constraint like sanctity. The requital is presupposed in the earthly life of man, it is an undertaking of spiritual perfection by degrees. Whoever grows himself wings upon the earth, says St Ephraim, is one who soars up into the heights; whoever purifies his mind here below, there glimpses the Glory of God. In whatever measure each one loves God, he is, by God's love,satiated to fullness according to that measure. Man, cleansing himself and attaining the grace of the Holy Spirit while still here on earth, has a foretaste of the Kingdom of Heaven. To attain to life eternal, in the teachings of St Ephraim, does not mean to pass over from one realm of being into another, but rather to discover "the heavenly," spiritual condition of being. Eternal life is not bestowed on man through God's one-sided efforts, but rather, it constantly grows like a seed within him by our efforts, toils, and struggles.

The pledge within us of "theosis" (or "deification") is the Baptism of Christ, and the main force that drives the Christian life is repentance. St Ephraim was a great teacher of repentance. The forgiveness of sins in the Mystery of Repentance, according to his teaching, is not an external exoneration, not a forgetting of the sins, but rather their complete undoing, their annihilation. The tears of repentance wash away and burn away the sin. Moreover, they (i.e. the tears) enliven, they transfigure sinful nature, they give the strength "to walk in the way of the the Lord's commandments," encouraging hope in God. In the fiery font of repentance, the saint wrote, "you sail yourself across, O sinner, you resurrect yourself from the dead."

St Ephraim, accounting himself as the least and worst of all, went to Egypt at the end of his life to see the efforts of the great ascetics. He was accepted there as a welcome guest and received great solace from conversing with them. On his return journey he visited at Caesarea in Cappadocia with St Basil the Great (January 1), who wanted to ordain him a priest, but he considered himself unworthy of the priesthood. At the insistence of St Basil, he consented only to be ordained as a deacon, in which rank he remained until his death. Later on, St Basil invited St Ephraim to accept a bishop's throne, but the saint feigned madness in order to avoid this honor, humbly regarding himself as unworthy of it.

After his return to his own Edessa wilderness, St Ephraim hoped to spend the rest of his life in solitude, but divine Providence again summoned him to serve his neighbor. The inhabitants of Edessa were suffering from a devastating famine. By the influence of his word, the saint persuaded the wealthy to render aid to those in need. From the offerings of believers he built a poor-house for the poor and sick. St Ephraim then withdrew to a cave near Edessa, where he remained to the end of his days.



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