Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Our Savior, God and Man

I have much to blog about but no time. Leaving very shortly to spend a few days at Ellwood City Monastery. Here is a beautiful Nativity meditation from St. Ephraim the Syrian's Spiritual Psalter. Long but very beautiful. I urge you to read the whole thing...

We confess one and the same individual as perfect God and perfect Man. He is God the Word Which was flesh.

For if He was not flesh, why was Mary chosen? And if He is not God, whom does Gabriel call Lord?

If He was not flesh, who was laid in a manger? And if He is not God, whom did the angels who came down from heaven glorify? If He was not flesh, who was wrapped in swaddling clothes? And if He is not God, in whose honor did the star appear?

If He was not flesh, whom did Simeon hold in his arms? And if He is not God, to whom did Simeon say: Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace?

If He was not flesh, whom did Joseph take when he fled into Egypt? And if He is not God, who fulfilled the prophesy: Out of Egypt have I called my Son?

If He was not flesh, whom did John baptize? And if He is not God, to whom did the Father say: This is my beloved Son, in Whom I am well pleased?

If He was not flesh, who hungered in the desert? And if He is not God, unto whom did the angels come and minister?

If He was not flesh, who was invited to the marriage in Cana of Galilee? And if He is not God, who turned the water into wine?

If He was not flesh, who took the loaves in the desert? And if He is not God, who fed the five thousand men and their women and children with five loaves and two fish?

If He was not flesh, who slept in the ship? And if He is not God, who rebuked the waves and the sea?

If He was not flesh, with whom did Simon the Pharisee sit at meat? And if He is not God, who forgave the sins of the harlot?

If He was not flesh, who wore a man’s garment? And if He is not God, who healed the woman with an issue of blood when she touched His garment?

If He was not flesh, who spat on the ground and made clay? And if He is not God, who gave sight to the eyes of the blind man with that clay?

If He was not flesh, who wept at Lazarus’ grave? And if He is not God, who commanded him to come forth out of the grave four days after his death?

If He was not flesh, whom did the Jews arrest in the garden? And if He is not God, who cast them to the ground with the words: I am He?

If He was not flesh, who was judged before Pilate? And if He is not God, who frightened Pilate’s wife in a dream?

If He was not flesh, whose garments were stripped from Him and parted by the soldiers? And if He is not God, why was the sun darkened upon His crucifixion?

If He was not flesh, who was crucified on the cross? And if He is not God, who shook the foundations of the earth?

If He was not flesh, whose hands and feet were nailed to the cross? And if He is not God, how did it happen that the veil of the temple was rent in twain, the rocks were rent, and the graves were opened?

If He was not flesh, who hung on the cross between two thieves? And if He is not God, how could He say to the thief: Today thou shalt be with me in paradise?

If He was not flesh, who cried out and gave up the ghost? And if He is not God, whose cry caused the many bodies of the saints which slept to arise?

If He was not flesh, whom did the women see laid in a grave? And if He is not God, about whom did the angels say to them: He has arisen, He is not here?

If He was not flesh, whom did Thomas touch when he put his hands into the prints of the nails? And if He is not God, who entered through the doors that were shut?

If He was not flesh, who ate at the sea of Tiberias? And if He is not God, on whose orders were the nets filled with fishes?

If He was not flesh, whom did the apostles see carried up into heaven? And if He is not God, who ascended to the joyful cries of the angels, and to whom did the Father proclaim: sit at My right hand?

If He is not God and man then, indeed, our salvation is false, and false are the pronouncements of the prophets.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Home for Christmas; Snoopy's middle name

I'm home for Christmas, flew in yesterday. Short flight connection in Baltimore but there were enough people like me that they held the plane :)

Today I went with my mom to a Christmas party at her work. Chloe, a five year old who was visiting with her family, saw the snow-globe with Snoopy and Woodstock. She asked me if I knew the bird's name and I said I did but couldn't remember. She then asked what Snoopy's middle name was. Her mom, who was standing right there, said "I don't think Snoopy has a middle name, Chloe." I told Chloe she should make up a middle name for Snoopy. She said it was "Penna." When I finally remembered Woodstock's name, I told her and asked her if he had a middle name. She said it was "Bamanapants." She was so cute!!!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

study sessions

I've decided that group study sessions are not very helpful for me. My best study tactics are alone with my computer or in a small group of 2 or 3.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Hawk

This morning, one of the campus hawks was perched on top of the cross on the dome of the chapel. It is a pretty common sight, but I hadn't seen it in awhile. They like that spot because it is the highest point on campus (not to mention the (second?) highest point in Boston.

It's also very nice weather...probably 60s (I'm not good at gauging (sp?) temperatures, but it's much warmer than it's been). It rained a lot last night; now the sun is poking through...

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Concert and hiccups

We had a concert today...the new students have been practicing all semester and today was our debut. We were so horrible that we had to get professionals to come sing with us. Overall, we were good, but the HCHC people were bad, but the professionals made up for it :) People said we were good  but that's because we had a ton of professionals singing with us...

Right before the concert, I got the hiccups. I wasn't able to go offstage to get water. I had the hiccups for almost 3/4 of the concert and tried to close my mouth when I felt one coming or do it during a loud piece of music. Once, though, I let out a hiccup at a rest (by accident), so it went something like this:

He rules the world with truth and grace! *loud hiccup* And makes the nations prove...

People around me started laughing, I was really embarrassed. Some of the audience heard it and some didn't. It was annoying...but hey, it's over now...

Now it's to bed and to use tomorrow and Tuesday to study for finals, the first of which is Wednesday!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Dinner

After Vespers I started a conversation with Leftheri in the chapel courtyard. Everyone else left while we were talking and Ellie was having a conversation with Stella and her friend who I don't know. When Stella and her friend left, Ellie joined our conversation. After a minute or two, crossing her arms and shivering, she asked if we could continue this conversation at dinner. Leftheri said, "Do you wanna come over for dinner?" I was like, "SURE!" So I ran down to give Deacon Gabriel the key for the computer lab, as I had worked until 5:00, and he worked at 6:00. I gave him the key and ran up to their apartment. We had left-overs from Leftheri's catering job - salmon, salad, papaya, honeydue. We also had bread and Ellie's mashed potatoes. It was a nice evening, we talked about many things, both theological, musical, and personal. I headed back to the dorm around 8:00.

Now to bed. Early morning (7:15 wake up), going to St. John the Baptist Church, where they do a full Orthros before Divine Liturgy. I'm excited.

Happy Sunday of the Forefathers and Feast of St. Spyridon!!! :)

OCF Coffeehouse

Last night, from 9-12 was a "Coffeehouse" at Holy Resurrection Church in Allston. It was the second one this year, but the first one I've gone to. They usually do them twice a semester. They do it in their hall. They have a mic and chair for people who play guitar, or sing, or whatever, to perform, and after all the performanced were done, they pulled up some YouTube clips and showed sing-along Christmas songs with open mic. We all went up and had a good time singing. I met some people from other schools. It was fun.

(There was, of course, coffee, tea, hot chocolate, cookies, chips, etc.)

It was a good time and I'm looking forward to the next one :)

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

so much to tell; so little time

Last weekend a group of us went to Worcester, to the church where Gabe's dad is the priest, and chanted Orthros and Liturgy on Sunday, in addition to helping out with Vespers on Saturday. The whole weekend was a blast. I may blog about it in more detail in the next couple days if I have time.

I am planning on coming home in the evening of Friday, December 17. I am coming back to Boston on Tuesday, January 25th, midday sometime. Anyone from the 'Burgh...if you wanna hang out, you got the dates.

College Conference December 28-31. YAY-YAH!

Monastery for New Years. YAY-YAH!

Friday, December 3, 2010

"This is the most ownage church!"

Last weekend was THE best Thanksgiving weekend EVER with George, Erin, Seraphim, Sophia and Theodosi at Theodosi's house in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. It all started... *flashback music*

On Tuesday, November 23, we all had Philosophy from 3:10 to 4:30. We left right around 5:00, as Vespers was starting. We felt bad missing Vespers, but we also wanted to arrive before 5 am. Our journey was adventurous. We took George’s family’s SUV, which his mom graciously loaned us. We started out the road trip by playing some intense games of “Ghost,” one of Seraphim’s favorites.

George drove for the first half of the trip, while I sat in the middle row of seats. We stopped at a rest stop, filled up on junk food, and Theodosi took over. I inherited “shotgun,” along with the position of navigator, helping Theodosi figure out where we were going and holding the directions we had printed from Mapquest. No GPS. At one point we got off an exit, only to go 1.3 miles west, go around a block on back streets, and go 1.4 miles east and get back on the interstate :) That was funny (George and Theo had been moving the route around on Mapquest, trying to find faster routes, and they speculated that when they moved it back they didn’t move it all the way and that’s why it got messed up).

There were some people who needed prayer so we decided to do a Paraklesis in the car. Seraphim and I had our Paraklesis books. Sophia had forgotten hers, so I lent her mine, while I volunteered to use my blue prayer book that has a different translation of Paraklesis. We all chanted together, and since I have the hymns half memorized, I was able to use my prayer book to know which hymn we were on, and chant the other translation. It was a bit confusing, but I was able to glance back at Seraphim’s book if I really got lost. It was really nice to chant Paraklesis together as an Orthodox/Hellenic College family. When we finished, I remarked that the windows were foggy with our breath from all the chanting. Since we were lacking incense, the foggy windows were the visible sign of our prayer rising to God :)

During the Sixth Ode of the Paraklesis (⅔-ish through it) Theo saw a sign for Cracker Barrel and interrupted, asking if we could stop, because a few people had expressed an interest in stopping there, and Theo, Sophia and Seraphim had never been (*gasp!*). We paused Paraklesis right before Προστασία (O Protection of Christians), and got out at Cracker Barrel. Seraphim, Sophia and Theodosi loved it. We got fish, corn, carrots, apple sauce, and fried okra. We had this awesome waiter named Jason, and Seraphim told him it was my birthday, so at the end of the meal three staff members came out and sang “Happy Birthday” to me and brought out a bowl of pineapple with orange slices and maraschino cherries. We had been asking about dairy-free stuff during dinner, so they said that this was the only dairy-free birthday dessert they could come up with :) At the end, we bought two fastworthy apple pies that we took to the Palises’ house, eating them the following day.

Another cool story from the trip to Bethlehem took place around midnight on a 27-mile stretch of US-209, a wooded, two-lane highway, out in Nowhere, PA. It was during the second half of the trip, while I was navigating. We had left Cracker Barrel within the hour, and I had to go to the bathroom, but figured I could hold it until we got to the next little town (Boondocks, PA). Theo half-jokingly said that we should stop. I said no, I can wait until the next village. George, however, insisted we pull over so he could “run through the woods.” There were no lights and Seraphim was deathly afraid, freaking out at the lack of light and the “shadiness” of the road. George insisted and Theodosi pulled over. I took the opportunity to go to the bathroom on the side of the road.

Outside the car, George and I marveled at the dark, beautiful, scenic landscape. The moon was shining very brightly, and we could see some clouds moving, and stars in between the clouds. It was so beautiful, it was completely still, and there were no other cars on the road. We told everyone else that it was really beautiful and they had to get out. Everyone got out and walked around a little bit, going a few yards up and down the road, admiring the midnight scenery. We also admired how clear the stars were in the moonlit, partly cloudy sky, and how still and deserted the road was. Some people lay down on the road, looking up at the stars, while I made myself hyper-aware of the condition of the road, making sure that no cars were coming. About five minutes after we stopped, I saw headlights in the distance, and said, “Guys. Car.” Everyone jumped up and scurried to the side of the road, although the car was not too too close. We jumped into the SUV, and continued the trip.

Six tired college students arrived in Northampton, PA around 2:00 AM, to the welcoming hugs and greetings of the Palis family! We got a tour of their house and were shown to our bedrooms – the girls in the girls’ bedroom, and the guys split between the guest room and the guys’ bedroom. Seraphim and I got the guest room, he on the bed, I on a floor mattress. Around 4:45 I conked out for a short nap ;) and was woken up two hours later, told to get ready to go to church. Fr. Nick does Liturgy each day of the Christmas fast, a tradition which he says is commonplace in Greece.

Most people chose to sleep in through Liturgy, as we had been up so late the night before. I went to Liturgy with Father Nick and Theodosi. Fr. Nick Kossis served Liturgy in the side chapel of St. Nektarios. When I got back to the Palis residence most people were just waking up. We had lunch, and that afternoon I took a two hour PLN. When I woke up we went to a newly-opened gyro shop, owned by parishioners of St. Nicholas (The Palises’ church). We ate vegetable gyros, calamaria and fries.

After the gyro shop we went to the church and did Great Vespers for St. Katherine. All the HC/HC people either chanted/read or served in the Altar. After Vespers Theodosi asked Fr. Nick for permission to give everyone a church tour. I was assuming he would show us the hall, the office, the classrooms, the basement, the ping-pong room, etc, but Fr. Nick had different ideas. When Fr. Nick finished up in the Altar, he started giving us a tour of the Nave, and I thought to myself, “Why are you giving us a tour? We are all Orthodox and know about Orthodox churches.” Au contraire, the tour was amazing and we all learned amazing stuff, including annual miracles from the Jordan River, Jerusalem and Mount Tabor, as Fr. Nick explained the icons covering the walls. During the tour Seraphim exclaimed, THIS IS THE MOST OWNAGE CHURCH!!!

We went into the narthex, and into the chapel of St. Nektarios. We sat down, and Fr. Nick began explaining the lives of various saints depicted on the walls of the chapel. Our jaws dropped through the floor as we heard miracle after miracle, associated with the lives of the saints and holy people, both living and deceased. That hour was amazing! Back at the house, Fr. Nick led us in Small Compline.

On Thursday morning, we had Divine Liturgy for St. Katherine/St. Mercurius (who Fr. Nick has a relic of)/Leavetaking of the Presentation of the Theotokos/Thanksgiving. Fr. Nick Palis served, along with Deacon Thomas who was visiting from a nearby church. The Liturgy was glorious and during Liturgy it started snowing, unbeknownst to everyone inside. When we looked outside at the conclusion of Liturgy, big white snowflakes were falling and it was a winter wonderland :) It was so beautiful and such a great surprise.

We went to the Palis house, changed clothes and chilled for a bit. Around 2:00, we left and went to the Hristofas house, Panayiota’s parents-in-law. We had the best food there (Thia Elli makes the best Μπαπκαλγιάροs, fried cod. They are so good!) We all doted on Kostaki, Panayiota and Lefteri’s 15-month-old son. We had a really good time at the Hristofas house. We came back relatively early (8-ish) because Thia Elli works early in the morning.

That night Fr. Nick had to go to church to make sure the service booklets were printed out for Friday morning. We all decided to go with him, to “watch a movie and play ping-pong.” When we got there, we realized that the services were already printed out. Fr. Nick decided to do some rearranging of icons and such in the Altar and vestry. I cleaned and filled two candilia (oil lamps) and changed some candles. That took awhile because I am not candili-savvy and had to light and re-light the wick, pulling and re-pulling it up. When I went back over to the office area (around 10:30), everyone else was watching Avatar in the library. Fr. Nick was almost ready to leave, so he, Evangelia and I left (at 11:30), while the others stayed to watch the movie. I fell asleep around 1:30-ish and they still weren’t back.

On Friday, after Liturgy we ate an amazing lunch at the Palis house and took off for Fr. Nick Kossis’s house, where we saw his garage-turned-chapel, where we sat while he talked for 40 minutes. From there we set off for Agia Skepi, the seven-seater SUV full to capacity with the six of us and Evangelia. We arrived half-way through Vespers, which flowed directly into Compline and Akathist. Church was over around 5:15. We went to their bookstore and were blown away by the plethora of beautiful icons, books and miscellaneous objects that were for sale. I called my mom afterwards and told her that I was glad I didn’t bring money ;) We ate dinner at 6:00, and afterwards took a walk in the dark, down to a little προσκινητάριον (prayer hut) dedicated to St. Seraphim of Sarov.

We took a toll road back to the Palis house, and getting off, Seraphim asked the guy at the toll booth if he liked his job. He said no, and we had a 1-2 minute conversation with him. He was cool.

Back at the house, Panayiota, Lefteri and Kostaki were visiting, so we hung out with them and then we watched some Greek YouTube videos on Fr. Nick’s computer while he translated. During the videos I conked out on the couch (half by accident). Afterwards, while I was sleeping, everyone went downstairs and watched Shooter. I woke up around 1:00 and didn’t even go downstairs. I found Fr. Nick, got his blessing, and went upstairs and conked out again. Right before I went to sleep, I came out of my room and found the bathroom crowded with people, in the bathtub, on top of the toilet, on the counter, just hanging out. “Excuse me. I have to use the bathroom.” They all migrated to Theo’s room and I went to the bathroom, hurried back to my room and conked out, as I knew they would be up talking for a few more hours (ended up 5:00 am) and I would be even more tired in the morning if I stayed up with them.

On Saturday morning Sophia and I went to Liturgy with Fr. Nick. We tried to wake up a few others but they were too tired. There was a forty-day memorial service for Yianni Gentis who died of cancer and who was an amazing guy. Memory Eternal!

When we got back around Noon, everyone else was sleeping. Slowly the whole house woke up, Lefteri, Panayiota and Kostaki came over, and we had an awesome lunch. We left the house at 2:20, and set off for St. Nektarios Monastery in Roscoe, New York, a three hour drive without stops. We arrived just before 6:00 PM, as we had stopped for 20 minutes and gotten lost several times. The plan was to leave as soon as Compline was over, and get back to Boston around 2:00 AM.

We admired all the little pine trees with Christmas lights, and the lit-up icon Nativity scene. The τράπεζα (refectory) is covered in icons and our jaws dropped lower and lower as we admired the beauty of the monastery and lamented that we had to leave so soon. They had finished dinner but set places for us. Compline started at 6:15, and around 6:40, when we finished dinner, we headed over to church to catch the Pre-Communion prayers and the second half of Compline.

When Compline ended, Theodosi came into church and told us that he had worked it out with the fathers and that they had room for us to stay the night. We were elated! One of the monks showed us to our rooms. Girls were in one building, guys in another. The rooms were threesomes, so Theo and Seraphim went downstairs and George and I went upstairs. We knew that Theo and Seraphim would be up for awhile (it’s just their personalities) so we were glad we were separate. They stayed up talking and monks kept visiting b/c they know Theo. George fell asleep around 9:15 and I conked out around 10:15. We woke up at 6:15, tired but refreshed from 8-9 hours of sleep, still not enough to make up from severe sleep deprivation over break.

A nice little “coincidence” that happened on Saturday night: When we went to our rooms after Compline, most of us noticed someone special above our beds. George and I entered our room and threw our stuff down on the beds. Only afterwards did we notice that George’s bed had an icon of St. George on the wall directly above it. Downstairs, Seraphim had St. Seraphim of Sarov, and Theodosi had the Theotokos, whom he refers to as his Mother. In the girls’ house, Sophia had the Holy Trinity, which served to remind her of Holy Trinity Monastery in Michigan (where we met this summer), which she was missing very much; Erin had St. Herman of Alaska above her bed. St. Herman is her family’s patron saint. I felt kind of left out: I had St. Mark the Evangelist. Not that he’s not awesome and a totally “ownage” Saint, but I just don’t have a personal connection to him. Maybe it’s a sign from God and St. Mark that I should develop a relationship with him… (Panagia was over the empty bed between me and George, and I thought of switching her and St. Mark, but then I felt bad for “hogging” Panagia, because I felt she should be in the middle protecting both of us. I left the icons the way they were.) While George and I noticed St. George above his bed, it was only after Liturgy in the morning that we discovered that that had happened in everyone’s room.

When we got back on campus I was debriefing with Thia Georgia and she said “St. Mark reminded you of your connection to Markos and also to our family.” I thought that was beautiful. So there was a connection between me and St. Mark after all :)

Another little coincidence: before leaving the Palis house, we had lost the SUV key (with a blue Ford logo), which was a really bad thing. George had checked his pockets several times and the key was not there. A minute after praying to St. Phanourios, we found the key in the glove compartment (only afterwards did we realize that this key had a black logo). We gave thanks to God and St. Phanourios for helping us find the key. Later, in our guest room at St. Nektarios, George came out of the bathroom to find a key with a blue logo sitting on his bed. He asked if Theo had come and dropped it off, as he had been the last one to drive the car. I said no, and we both marveled that the key had mysteriously appeared there. Theo still had his key. Before leaving the Palises’, George had checked his pockets several times so it couldn’t have fallen out of his pocket while he was sitting on the bed before. It was weird and there is no explanation except God.

I awoke around 6:15 to a beautiful sunrise. It was just starting, so it was still pretty dark, but the first rays of crystal clear pink and magenta light were starting to poke over the horizon and onto the clouds. The climax was probably during church, but it was so beautiful even for the minute that I saw it! The sunrise also streamed into the church, through the back windows of the Altar, right through the Royal Doors and onto the Solea. There were rays of light shining on the priest as he stood at the Altar, and shining onto the Solea when he was somewhere else.

Orthros began at 6:45. The second priest served. The abbot vested and read the Orthros Gospel, and then unvested and stood in the Altar. The second priest and the deacon served the rest of Orthros and the Divine Liturgy. The Great Doxology began around 8:30, flowing right into the Divine Liturgy, which ended around 10:30. There were many people there, much more than I expected. Communion took a long time. Right before Communion, one of the monks came to the front of the nave and announced, head bowed, prayer rope going, that only Orthodox Christians who have prepared themselves, received confession, and have the blessing of their spiritual father, may approach the chalice. In English he added that members of the Armenian and Coptic faiths are not Orthodox and cannot receive Holy Communion.

We processed from the church to the τράπεζα (led by Γέροντα), where we had a wonderful spaghetti and tuna meatball lunch while one of the Fathers read a spiritual book. After lunch we browsed the bookstore and everyone (especially Erin, George and Sophia) got distracted petting super-cute monastery cats. We said Greek good-byes, and when we had piled into the car Seraphim asked if there were a priest around. I didn’t see Γέροντα or the second priest, so I said no. Just then I remembered something in our room, ran in to grab it, and when I came out the second priest was walking up the driveway with some pilgrims. Theodosi and I asked for his blessing for safe travel and he said, “May the Archangels open the road for you.” It was so beautiful! We left around 12:30. Seraphim and Theodosi had bought three six-cut, soy cheese pizzas from the monastery that we munched on on the way home. They tasted just like the real thing! After much traffic and a few stops, we arrived in Boston just after 9:00 PM.

I mentioned the key incident above, with St. Phanourios. In the car Seraphim couldn’t find his plastic bag with food in it. We looked all over and were starting to freak out that we had left it somewhere, as it was nowhere to be found. I said a silent prayer to St. Phanourios and then said that we should ask him to help us find the bag. Five seconds later, Sophia moves one of the backpacks next to her, and underneath it is the plastic bag with the food. No joke.

As we were pulling up to park and unload the SUV, we ran into (not literally) Fr. Timothy and Pres. Tammy who were just bringing Gabriel back from Thanksgiving break at home (an hour away).

This was literally the best Thanksgiving ever! I think everyone agrees with me. Between the Palis house, Thanksgiving at the Hristofas house, the daily Liturgies, the chill time, the car rides, the conversations, the monasteries… all in all it was a blast!

A few shoutouts:
Mrs. Bryant, for lending us the SUV
The Palis family, for making us part of their household for three and a half days
George and Theo, for driving
The nuns at Holy Protection, and the monks at St. Nektarios, for their welcome and hospitality
Fr. Luke, Fr. Philip, Fr. Demetrios, and the priest at the monastery for travel blessings
Fr. Nick Palis for an awesome church tour and bedtime blessings
Fr. Nick Kossis for the spiritual advice and the tour of his garage-turned-chapel
Both Frs. Nick (Kossis and Palis), and the priest-monk at St. Nektarios, for taking us to the Kingdom during the Divine Liturgies
The Hristofases, for Thanksgiving dinner
The people at the gyro shop, for the free food at the Open House
St. Phanourios, for the car keys and the bag of food
God, Panagia and our favorite saints, for protecting us while we slept at St. Nektarios
Our Guardian Angels, for working overtime
God, for EVERYTHING!!!

Erin: “I feel like Theo was our ladder to Divine Ascent…”
Seraphim: “…and his abs are the rungs.”