Church of the Nativity

Old Rite Russian Orthodox

​An Old Rite parish of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR). We are located in Erie, PA.

October Service and Confession Schedule

SERVICE SCHEDULE:

Saturday, October 5 - Compline 4:00pm, Vespers & Matins 4:30pm,

Sunday, October 6 - Hours & Liturgy 8:15am; Sunday School 11:00am

Tuesday, October 8 - Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:20pm

Wednesday, October 9 - Repose of St. John the Theologian- Hours & Liturgy 7:15am

Saturday, October 12- Compline 4:00pm, Vespers & Matins 4:30pm

Sunday, October 13- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

Sunday, October 13- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:20pm

Monday, October 14- Protection of the Mother of God- Hours & Liturgy 7:15am

Saturday, October 19- Compline 4:00pm, Vespers & Matins 4:30pm

Sunday, October 20- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am; Sunday School 11:00am

Saturday, October 26- Compline 4:00pm, Vespers & Matins 4:30pm

Sunday, October 27- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

Monday, October 28- Prayers for Departed Relatives/Friends- 7:30am

Tuesday, October 29- Prayers for Departed Relatives/Friends- 7:30am

Friday, November 1- Universal Panahida for all Departed- 4:00pm

CONFESSION SCHEDULE: 

Saturday, October 5- 8:30am (Fr. Pimen) 

Saturday, October 12- 8:30am (Fr. Pimen); 5:30pm (Fr. Hierotheus)

Wednesday, October 16- 5:15pm (Fr. Pimen)

Saturday, October 26- 8:30am (Fr. Pimen)

September Schedule of Services and Confession

SERVICE SCHEDULE:

Saturday, August 31- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:30pm

Sunday, September 1- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am ** Dormition Collection**

Saturday, September 7- Compline 4:00pm, Vespers & Matins 4:30pm, 

Sunday, September 8- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

Tuesday, September 10- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:30pm

Wednesday, September 11- Beheading of St. John the Baptist- Hours & Liturgy 7:30am, DAY OF STRICT FAST

Saturday, September 14- Compline 4:00pm, Vespers & Matins 4:30pm

Sunday, September 15- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

Friday, September 20- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:30pm

Saturday, September 21- Nativity of the Mother of God- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

Saturday, September 21- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:30pm

Sunday, September 22- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

Thursday, September 26- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:20pm

Friday, September 27Elevation of the Precious Cross-   Hours & Liturgy 7:30am

Saturday, September 28- Small Vespers 4:00pm, Vigil 4:30pm

Sunday, September 29- Hours & Liturgy 8:15am

 

CONFESSION SCHEDULE:

Saturday, September 7- 8:30am (Fr. Pimen);  5:30pm (Fr. Hierotheus)

Saturday, September 14- 8:30am (Fr. Pimen)

Wednesday, September 18- Confession 5:45pm (Fr. Pimen) 

Wednesday, September 25- Confession 5:45pm (Fr. Pimen) 

Fr. Pimen's Notes- September 2013

At the parish supper discussion held at the Community Center after Vespers on August 1st, we discussed the following issues:

1. Encouraging more frequent participation in Holy Communion and assisting parishioners to do so.  We decided to conduct Confession periodically during the Saturday evening Vigil in order to enable parishioners, who might find it difficult to attend regularly scheduled confessions, to make a confession and then to partake of Holy Communion the next day. We will do this at least once a month and will notify the parish when these confessions will be held by announcing the day for each month in the monthly newsletter. During September, these confessions will be heard on Saturday September 7th beginning immediately after Vespers (approximately 5:30 pm). Parishioners who choose to attend such confessions should be present for the opening and finishing parts of the Confession service, and in between, whole waiting for others to confess, should be in the church proper taking part in Matins that is continuing at the same time.  Furthermore, we will include in the Newsletter the schedule of all Confession services for the month. These will be listed in the section that lists feast day services for the month.

2.    Deciding on the best time to start services in light of work and school obligations that are a reality of 21st Century American life. The following starting times were agreed upon by all present:                                                                             

a. Saturday Afternoon –Small Vespers or Compline – 4:00pm; Vigil (or Great Vespers) – 4:30pm. If, however, there is a celebration of a feast on a Sunday that includes Old Testament readings in Vespers and a Magnification in Matins, Vigil (or Great Vespers) will begin at 4:15 pm to keep the completion time standard on all Saturdays.

b. Weekday Feast – Small Vespers- 4:10pm: Vigil (or Great Vespers) – 4:30pm. If, however, there is a celebration of a feast that includes some significantly longer portions (a long Canon or veneration of the Cross or blessing of holy water), Vigil will begin at 4:15 pm to keep thecompletion time standard on all Feast Day Vigils.

c. Sunday afternoon - Vigil for a Monday Feast – Small Vespers at 4pm followed immediately by Vigil at 4:15pm.

3.   Helping to encourage parishioners to schedule panahidi (memorial services) for deceased family and friends. In the Church Rubric, there is an option for conducting these services without singing the 17th Kathisma. This makes the service about 10-15 minutes shorter and hopefully will encourage parishioners to hold these services more regularly, and also to attend them as well have to have them served. This form of panahida will be served for all individual panahidi, but the full service with the 17th Kathisma will be served for “liturgical” panahidi (e.g. – panahidi during weeks of prayers for the deceased).

Regarding Frequent Communion of the Holy Mysteries of Christ

Taken from a 2005 interview with the Very Most Reverend Hilarion, Metropolitan of Volokalamsk and reprinted in the Parish Life publication of St. John the Baptist Cathedral in Washington, DC.

(...) The foundations of Christian spiritual life, and of the life of the church community are the Eucharist, the Liturgy, and Holy Communion. Eucharistic piety is the rock upon which any religious community is founded. I note that wherever Communion is infrequent, where people approach the Holy Chalice only on major feasts or on other special occasions, it is very difficult, nay, even impossible, to form a strong church community, for it lacks the foundation on which it could be built. Without that foundation, it is impossible to build a strong family, which is called to be a “little Church,” for it can become such a little Church only if its members regularly commune. For that reason, in my homilies, I call upon parishioners to commune as often as possible, and consider that in principle, every Christian has the right to commune each time he attends the Liturgy. Of course, this is with the condition that he observes the rules of the Church, that he lives according to the Church calendar, and that his manner of life corresponds to the moral norms established by the Church. If all of those conditions are observed, there is no impediment to communing at every Liturgy.

Moreover, I consider it ecclesiastically nonsensical to attend the Liturgy without communing. Christ’s words, spoken by the priest: “Take, eat, this is My Body,” and “Drink of it all of you; this is My Blood of the New Testament…” and the deacon’s words, “With fear of God, and faith, draw nigh,” are addressed to everyone in the church, not to some category of people, e.g., those who have prepared for Holy Communion. Of course, here it is necessary to avoid extremes, and it is important that, in accordance with the words of the Holy Apostle St. Paul, one should approach the Holy Mysteries of Christ with discernment, lest Communion become a ritual formality, and frequent Communion engender a sense of becoming accustomed to that greatest of Mysteries. But I repeat that frequent, regular Communion should be the foundation of the spiritual life of any Christian. It is hard for me to imagine my life without Communion at least once a week. In a certain sense, I live from one Sunday to the next, from one Feast to the next. It is Communion that gives one the strength to be a Christian. 3

Vladyka, a question regarding the [prayer] rule: According to the ustav of the Russian Orthodox Church, there exists an entire collection of prayers before Communion, that one is to read before approaching this Mystery. If you take into account the rhythm/pace of daily life of most people, especially young people, it is quite difficult to read all of these prayers. As a result, many do not approach the Holy Chalice because they are incapable of preparing for Communion as required.

First of all, there is no official ustav in the Russian Orthodox Church that would dictate what one must read before communing of the Holy Mysteries of Christ. Prayer books include an Order of [preparation for] Holy Communion: Prayer books contain the Order of Preparation for Holy Communion. That Order is not part of the daily cycle of services, is not mentioned anywhere in the Typicon, but is a collection of prayers, composed over the course of centuries, which help Christians to get in the proper frame of mind and to appropriately prepare for Holy Communion. I think that it is not something requiring a great deal of time or great sacrifices to read that Order once a week, on Saturday evening, in preparation for receiving the Holy Mysteries of Christ. I think that those students, educators, workers, and those who are raising children can all find the twenty minutes needed to read that rule. If finding even twenty minutes is impossible, the Rule may be shortened to but a few prayers. After all, the point is not to simply read a certain number of prayers, but to focus oneself in an appropriate manner, and to spiritually prepare oneself to receive the Mysteries of Christ. Sometimes it is more beneficial to read but one prayer, several times, slowly, with due comprehension, reflecting on and feeling every word, than it is to read the entire Order absentmindedly, with one’s thoughts straying elsewhere.

There also exists the practice of reading canons and akathists before receiving the Holy Mysteries of Christ. There are spiritual directors who require of their spiritual charges that they follow that practice. For example, they say that before communing, one must read at least three canons, and one akathist, in addition to the Order of Preparation for Holy Communion. Personally, I do not agree with such a requirement. First of all, they are not prescribed by any Church ustav; it is but a pious tradition 4

not directed in any Church ustav. Secondly, if one wants to read canons and akathists and has the time to do so, he can but reap benefit from such reading. However, I consider making reading those canons and akathists a condition for Communion to be quite incorrect. By doing so, we only frighten people away from the Holy Chalice, depriving them of what is the very heart and foundation of the Christian life, Communion of the Holy Mysteries of Christ.

As with other like questions, you need to look for the answer in the Church ustav, in the Typicon. Is there place in the Typicon that directs observing fasts in addition to those established by the Holy Church? No. Does any other ustav adopted and approved by the Church as generally obligatory direct such fasts? They do not. For one who communes infrequently, who does not observe the Fasts, who is far removed from the Church, it is useful to fast for a few days before Communion. However, it seems to me that if one observes the Fasts established by the Church – and these include four lengthy Fasts, in addition to fasting on Wednesdays and Fridays throughout the year – he should not be required to observe some kind of supplementary fasts. Moreover, open up the Orthodox anti-Catholic catechism published in the 19th Century and still used in some seminaries as an educational resource, and you will see that the Catholic Church is criticized for instituting Saturday as a Fast day. It also says that fasting on Saturday is contrary to the Church statutes. Thus, people who observe the Fasts and Church rules should not be given any kind of additional obligations. I would recommend to those who fast on Wednesday and Friday that on Sundays and Feast Days, they approach to commune of the Holy Mysteries of Christ with an untroubled conscience.

* * *

Paschal Epistle from Bishop John

Christ is Risen!​

Brothers and sisters, faithful sons and daughters of Christ's Church, my dear Christians, I greet you all on this Feast of Feasts, on which, as the service tells us, all is filled with light, Heaven and earth, even the underworld, and at which not just mankind rejoices, but also the angels, all creation, visible and invisible.

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Our Righteous Father John Climacus

​On the Fourth Sunday of Holy Lent the Orthodox Church commemorates our Righteous Father John Climacus. He is called Climacus due to his authorship of the great spiritual work The Ladder of Divine Ascent. His commemoration is designated by the Church on one of the Sundays of Lent as his life and writings affirm him as a supreme bearer and proponent of Christian asceticism. The ascetic example of this great Saint of the Church inspires us in our Lenten journey.

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The Sundays of Lent

Each of the Sundays of Great Lent has its own special theme.  As we begin the third week of this wonderful fast, let us read about the next four Sundays:

The Third Sunday of Lent is that of the Veneration of the Cross. The cross stands in the midst of the church in the middle of the lenten season not merely to remind us of Christ’s redemption and to keep before us the goal of our efforts, but also to be venerated as that reality by which man must live to be saved. “He who does not take up his cross and follow me is not worthy of me” (Mt 10:38). For in the Cross of Christ Crucified lies both “the power of God and the wisdom of God” for those being saved (1 Cor 1:24).

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Ladies Auxiliary News for April 2013

Flower Fund News  Our thanks to Jean Barth and Florence and Harry Zatkoff for their generous donations to the Flower Fund for Pascha flowers.

The beautiful floral arrangement which adorned the Cross for Third Sunday/Annunciation is being donated by Velma Galvin in memory of her beloved husband, Buzz Galvin, her parents Sam (Sergei) and Mayme (Matrona) Marks and Velma’s brother, John Marks.

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