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Joined: Mar 2002
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I miss the goat...need another one to replace it with? Illya, believe me I can completely empathize with your feelings. Speaking my mind to the hierarchy generally hasn't gotten me very far, either. Even if I wasn't married I would be petrified beyond imagination at the thought of the episcopacy. I am even petrified at the thought of the presbyterate. There's nothing wrong with the diaconate, you know.  Our church needs good deacons, subdeacons, readers and cantors as well who know the services as it's a package deal for the restoration of the tradition. Jordanville would definitely be hard to beat...but in defense of St. Vlad's Drillock et. al. have done some great work with music there.
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Originally posted by Deacon Lance: Why is it if a layperson has a job in the Church enumeration is expected to be commensurate with experience but an ordained deacon or priest is expected to do same job for nothing or peanuts? A married deacon or priest can simply not be expected to work a full-time job to support his family and then work another for free because the Church can't afford it. It is not fair to the man's family and it is not just. Lance, On this we can agree fully. Amen. Neil
"One day all our ethnic traits ... will have disappeared. Time itself is seeing to this. And so we can not think of our communities as ethnic parishes, ... unless we wish to assure the death of our community."
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Our school secretary had a sign in her office which read: 'I work for the Church. Sure, the pay is lousy but the retirement benefits are out of this world!' 
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Well, if it makes any of the unpaid minor clergy & deacons feel better, I personally know a bishop who does not have a salary from his diocese, such is the state of stinginess in North America. He now lives in "the old country" where they know how to respect clergy and where they are using his invaluable erudition and fine pastoral qualities to great benefit for their own flock.
To quote him, "you do what you can do."
[It is interesting to note that the wealthiest states (New Hampshire, Massachusetts, etc.) have the lowest per capita donations to charity while the poorest states (Mississippi, West Virginia, etc.) have the highest per capita donations.]
While I was at St. Vladimir's Seminary, fellow students used to lament the precipitous decline in membership that the OCA suffered during the 1990s. I used to scandalize them with the riposte, "are you sure that it isn't God's will that the current Church in North America diminish and dissipate due to our lack of faithfulness and suffocating stinginess?"
They were not amused, but testimonies such as the one that I have relayed at the beginning of my post always lead me back to that question.
All that I can say is that "I'll do what I can do."
With love in Christ, Andrew
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Just to surprise you all - slightly off topic I know, but whilst the thoughts of money are fresh in your minds I thought you might like a few details about the remuneration for our RC Priests in Glasgow
Annual salary from the Archdiocese �2000 [ roughly US Dollars 3485] Housing is covered - in the Parish house , likewise all living expenses like food , telephone etc.
If they have a car they buy it themselves Clothing is their responsibility Holidays are their responsibility
Oh- and there is no private health care for them - NHS is considered adequate.
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I find Ilya's crack on St Vladimir's to be confusing. Where does he get such a strange idea that SVS is not "what it used to be"? What did it "used to be"? I love SVS and find it to be both spiritually uplifting, academically stimulating, and just a fun place to be--and I am not even Orthodox! He must be speaking to someone who has had a bad experience or is disguntled. Some people here don't like it but that is to be expected. Ilya should think about the fact that sometimes one person's opinion is not everything. SVS has many open houses and if Ilya were interested he could come to one of the retreats for instance. Please do not judge what you have not experienced! anastasios (No, I am not being paid to endorse my school! ;  )
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anastasios wrote: I find Ilya's crack on St Vladimir's to be confusing. Where does he get such a strange idea that SVS is not "what it used to be"? What did it "used to be"? I agree with anastasios. While I have not visited St. Vladimir�s in several years the last time I was there the whole place carried the presence of prayer. It has become a wonderful and desperately needed Eastern Light to the Western culture we live in. I can suggest a positive interpretation to Ilya�s comment. Maybe he meant that not every generation is blessed with priests like Fathers Alexander Schmemann and John Meyendorff.
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When I studied there, Frs. Schmemann and Meyendorff had departed, but their successors were not possibly any less qualified, blessed, talented, and dedicated.
My own time there was a special one that shall forever be a large part of my small (tiny) rock of faith.
With love in Christ, Andrew
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Let us be more objective. One of the advantages of being a minority in a country that has an enormous Protestant or Catholic majority like the USA, or even a smaller minority like in Mexico, is that our Churches are generaly much less contaminated by politics, interests, and all the things that are so common in the mainstram religion of the country, such as Roman Catholicism in my case. This is also because the mainstram relgion is always in the medias and examined all the time, and must respond to public opinion, while the Orthodox communities who are a very small minority, are more free to develop without pressures and there's a lot of brotherhood. But on the other side, the same negative aspects of the Catholic hierarchy in Mexico (that they're too political, too involved with the government, state-sponsored) exist in Orthodox countries with hierarchs who are even more political and have less interest in the spiritual care of their flocks. In Greece for example, before Archbishop Christodoulos did the effort to "renew" the spirituality, many priests had become very much like burocrats who celebrated liturgies automaticaly and performed sacraments just as a job, mere employees of the state. In these Orthodox countries a lot of people have converted to the RC minority because the sense of brotherhood and less burocracy is very good, and the RC is really a refuge for those christians who want a more free Church, with more love and less administration and the RC really has a very missionary attitude in foreign countries that is not followed here. Now this doesn't mean that all are that way. I have known of very holy Roman Bishops and priests here who always put the spiritual matters as their most important goal. There's also another important thing. Orthodox Bishops are chosen from the monasteries where their duties are mostly spiritual and are often very instructed in pastoral and spiritual issues, while Catholic Bishops are chosen from clergy who have a lot of academical and administrative preparation, but poor development in ascetism and monasticism, human relations, spiritual matters, etc. This is true for both Roman and eastern Bishops in Western countries who are appointed by the Pope in consultation with the local Roman hierarchy.
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I did not mean to offend, I am sorry if i did. But I have many OCA clergy friends who give me the lo-down on things. I have also heard of the good things at Saint Vladimir's from a current student there. So don't get me wrong, it is still lightyears ahead of anything we have in the Greek-Catholic world. The Sheptytsky institue in Ottawa is trying hard and the Theological Universily in Lvov is also doing good work, but they are still in their infancy. Perhaps someday they will achieve such great renown as Saint Vladimir's in Crestwood.
Sorry if I offended,
Ilya
Ilya (Hooray for Orthodoxy!!)Galadza
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Originally posted by Mexican:
There's also another important thing. Orthodox Bishops are chosen from the monasteries where their duties are mostly spiritual and are often very instructed in pastoral and spiritual issues, while Catholic Bishops are chosen from clergy who have a lot of academical and administrative preparation, but poor development in ascetism and monasticism, human relations, spiritual matters, etc. This is true for both Roman and eastern Bishops in Western countries who are appointed by the Pope in consultation with the local Roman hierarchy. This is what confuses me. Why aren't our Bishops chosen from monasteries (in the proper sense of the term)? If we want to be truly catholic, we need to have bishops that are trult orthodox-in every sense, including monastic formation. I know, I know "what about basilians and redempterists?" I just don't understand how monks belonging to an order can be left alone to live in a house and run a parish. Even the ideas of "orders" are supposed to be foreign to our church. I would love to see some SSMI mansions turned into real places of obshestvennoye zhitie. In an observation made by a priest (who will remain nameless) of the current living situation of one of these "monasteries": "If this is poverty, bring on chastity." I know that this will probably provoke much defense- but I am trying to make the point that our duty, as given to us by Vatican II, is not to deviate from our true orthodox traditions. Where we have deviated, we must stive to come back to what is original. Where we have lost our traditions, we must look to the Orthodox for guidance. Many people will say that it was the Romans who were constantly trying to lantinize us. I say we are doing a fine job on our own. Holy Father Alexis of Wilkes-Barre pray to God for us! excuse me while i go hide under a pile of jackets, Gavshev
Ilya (Hooray for Orthodoxy!!)Galadza
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Here I go- about to ramble again.
In the world of government, it is sometimes said that democracy is a very bad form of government, but that all others are worse. In the corporate world there is sometimes mentioned "the methods you learn in training, versus what you do on the job". Theory is one thing, practice another. Some things work, some things don't. So it is with the products of institutions of higher learning. There are those who admire one institution more than another, but in the parishes it becomes a matter of effective leadership and spiritual direction, practice versus theory. If a leader does not communicate and motivate the Faith well, his followers may have difficulty following his lead, because he gives an impression of having poor leadership skills, or not knowing what to do. Pedigree will not save a church leader or lay person in such a situation.
There is also a biblical warning, "Put not your trust in princes and sons of men in whom there is no salvation, etc." It is more important to focus on one's relationship with God, and how it can grow. This applies to everyone regardless of earthly status. After all, everyone is accountable for their spiritual life, whether their church hierarchy successfully gets its message across or not, and it is often more productive to work on things you have some control over.
In the final analysis, it will be Christ who saves, or doesn't, depending on how we conduct ourselves, regardless of status or the amount of burdens one takes.
I hope I haven't confused or offended anyone.
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Dear Ilya,
Well, your point is extremely well-taken and it is one that is part of an ongoing debate among EC's.
Fr. I. Nazarko in his book on Kyivan Metropolitans writes about the lives of EC Kyivan Metropolitans and their "issues" with Basilians way back then.
One Metropolitan tried to forbid Basilians to teach in schools, saying that that wasn't the function of Eastern monastics.
Essentially, our Basilians, having been "reorganized" more than once by Poland, are a kind of "Eastern Rite Jesuit Order" and it is no surprise that their emblem is a Cyrillic form of the Jesuit "IHS" or "IXC."
As we know, our Basilians take the same Jesuit vow of loyalty to the Pope until their last breath.
The Studites alone represent traditional Eastern monasticism in our Church following strictly the Rules of St Basil.
St Nicholas Charnetsky was himself a Redemptorist, but completely adapted himself to Orthodox monasticism as did St Basil Velichkovsky.
These two did not allow even one change to the Orthodox traditions among which they found themselves. St Basil V. even complained, in his diary, that the Orthodox that had come into communion with Rome started to kneel for Holy Communion - even though he asked them to stay true to the traditions of the Eastern Church!
Rome has appointed many Basilian and Redemptorist Bishops for our Church - and it says it does so to remain true to Eastern Church tradition with respect to consecrating only Black, monastic clergy to the episcopate.
That is true, but then again it isn't.
Neither "Order" represents the spirit of true Eastern monasticism as the Eastern Churches know it.
That doesn't mean those Redemptorist or Basilian bishops who are around aren't "good" - it is just that other than the Studites, our Church's "Orders" are alienated from traditional Eastern monasticism.
The Orthodox Church, as I understand it, will sometimes allow a celibate, non-monastic priest to be consecrated a bishop - but then he must undergo the monastic rite of tonsure before his actual consecration.
One Ruthenian priest once wrote me to say, cheerfully in fact, not to worry about any of this since the "Orders" in North America will disappear in time to be replaced by true Eastern monastic communities . . .
But I don't see why those we have now, the "Orders," can't simply study Eastern monasticism and follow the ancient traditions, while dissolving their "Orders" as having gone beyond their "best before dates" and in keeping with the ideals of returning to our ancient traditions.
Alex
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Originally posted by GAVSHEV: The Sheptytsky institue in Ottawa is trying hard and the Theological Universily in Lvov is also doing good work, but they are still in their infancy. Perhaps someday they will achieve such great renown as Saint Vladimir's in Crestwood.
Ilya Reading this puts one in mind of the late Archpriest Georges Florovsky's lament in the 1950s upon coming to St. Vladimir's after his phenomenal formation in Odessa, Bulgaria, Paris and elsewhere. He regarded the students at St. V's as little more than hicks with only the barest rudiments of theological formation. Texts that were baby food in Europe, he said, were regarded by students at St. V's as "too difficult" even after 2 or 3 years of advanced study. Reading this also puts one in mind that St. V's has had more than half a century to develop while the Sheptytsky Institute has gone from nothing to what it is today in 13 years. That includes, inter alia, an unprecedented multimillion dollar endowment, a trilingual academic journal read around the world, and, let us not forget, the ONLY place in the Western hemisphere where one may pursue advanced research degrees, including most notably the Ph.D., in Eastern Christian studies.
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Dear Adam,
The Sheptytsky Institute is the primary choice for EC candidates for the priesthood, to be sure!
It has grown and developed by leaps and bounds and has the best people associated with it, as you know yourself . . .
Could those at the Institute ever take courses with St Vlad's or with St Andrew's in Winnipeg?
Alex
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