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Showing posts from March, 2013

International Conference on Liturgical Renewal

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Orthodox Liturgy: Lessons from the Past, Conemporary Trends, and Opportunities   Written by Brother Stavros   left to right: Fr. Philip Zymaris, Professor of Liturgics, Fr. Alkiviadis Calivas Professor Emeritus of Liturgics, former Dean, Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology Brother Stavros, New Skete An International Conference on Liturgical Renewal, a two-day event gathering liturgical scholars and practitioners from as far away as Hong Kong, Georgia, Greece, Rumania, and Austria, was held March 15 and 16 as part of the 75 th anniversary of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology,  Brookline, Massachusetts, under the title Orthodox Liturgy, Lesson from the Past, Contemporary Trends, and Opportunities.   A Fellow of the British Academy, Archimandrite the Rev. Dr. Robert Taft, S.J., Professor Emeritus of Oriental Liturgy at the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome, gave the keynote address: “ Liturgical Renewal in Orthodoxy: Reflections, Cautions, Suggest

New Skete Annual Spring Retreat

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recap written by Br. Marc New Skete’s annual spring retreat took place last Saturday, limited to forty participants. Matins (morning service) was at 8:00, followed by registration and a breakfast with bagels, fruit and coffee. Brother Luke welcomed everyone gathered in the annex conference room and gave a general preview of the day. Sister Rebecca then made the first of the day’s 75-minute presentations, “From Darkness to Light in Scripture and in our Lives,”   Using a PowerPoint visual program, she explored the Biblical creation narratives in a nuanced way based on the original Hebrew texts and the tradition of Jewish commentaries. Some topics were: darkness and chaos in the beginning, God as darkness to our perception; faulty and harmful images of God; evil, and times of darkness and suffering; wrongful action. The second part explored primal light of creation as revealing God presence and action, our resonating with this through paradox, deeper meaning, awareness, and conscie

Easter and Pascha - Why the Calendar Differences

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by Brother Stavros Published in The Evangelist   A Renaissance Pope, Julius Caesar and Iznik People, Places and Events that Influence the Easter - Pascha Calendar Modern commercial calendars have a citation that will generally read "Eastern Orthodox Easter." Typically, this citation falls a week after the Western Easter. You may find it as advanced as five weeks later into the month of May. The reasons for the differences in the calendar can be found by looking back over the last seventeen hundreds years at the people, places and events that influenced this occurrence.  Icon - Fathers of First Ecumenical Council holding the Nicene Creed  When the First Ecumenical Council met in the city of Nicea, now known as the town of Iznik, Turkey, the Council’s main focus was to hammer out the basics of Christology and produce an agreed upon Creed. The 318 Fathers assembled had a secondary task; arrive at a common date for Easter. At that tim