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Holy Trinity Church
Publish Date: 2017-01-29
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Ignatiosgodbearer
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Holy Trinity Church

General Information

  • Phone:
  • (724) 266-5336
  • Fax:
  • (724) 266-0703
  • Street Address:

  • 2930 Beaver Road

  • Ambridge, PA 15003
  • Mailing Address:

  • 2930 Beaver Road

  • Ambridge, PA 15003


Contact Information




Services Schedule

Sunday Summer Hours - from first Sunday after Memorial Day

Orthros 8:30 am

Divine L:iturgy 9:30 am

Sunday Winter Hours - from first Sunday after Labor Day

Orthros 9:00 am

Divine Liturgy 10:00 am

Saturday Vespers 6:00 pm

Week Day Divine Liturgy 9:00 am


Past Bulletins


Hymns of the Day

Resurrectional Apolytikion in the Grave Tone

O Lord by Your sacred Cross You abolished death, and granted unto the thief blessed paradise. The Myrrh-bearers ceased lamenting and turned to joy. The apostles did preach the Good News at Your command, that You had risen from the dead O Christ Our God, bestowing Your mercy upon the world ever more.

Apolytikion for Relics of Ignatius the Godbearer in the Fourth Tone

As a sharer of the ways and a successor to the throne of the Apostles, O inspired of God, thou foundest discipline to be a means of ascent to divine vision. Wherefore, having rightly divided the word of truth, thou didst also contest for the Faith even unto blood, O Hieromartyr Ignatius . Intercede with Christ our God that our souls be saved.

Seasonal Kontakion in the First Tone

Your birth sanctified a Virgin's womb and properly blessed the hands of Symeon. Having now come and saved us O Christ our God, give peace to Your commonwealth in troubled times and strengthen those in authority, whom You love, as only the loving One.
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Gospel and Epistle Readings

Epistle Reading

Prokeimenon. Grave Tone. Psalm 28.11,1.
The Lord will give strength to his people.
Verse: Bring to the Lord, O sons of God, bring to the Lord honor and glory.

The reading is from St. Paul's Second Letter to the Corinthians 6:16-18; 7:1.

BRETHREN, you are the temple of the living God; as God said, "I will live in them and move among them, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. Therefore come out from them, and be separate from them, says the Lord, and touch nothing unclean; then I will welcome you, and I will be a father to you, and you shall be my sons and daughters, says the Lord Almighty."

Since we have these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from every defilement of body and spirit, and make holiness perfect in the fear of God.


Gospel Reading

Sunday of the Canaanite
The Reading is from Matthew 15:21-28

At that time, Jesus went to the district of Tyre and Sidon. And behold, a Canaanite woman from that region came out and cried, "Have mercy on me, O Lord, Son of David; my daughter is severely possessed by a demon." But he did not answer her a word. And his disciples came and begged him, saying, "Send her away, for she is crying after us." He answered, "I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel." But she came and knelt before him, saying, "Lord, help me." And he answered, "It is not fair to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs." She said, "Yes, Lord, yet even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master's table." Then Jesus answered her, "O woman, great is your faith! Be it done for you as you desire." And her daughter was healed instantly.


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Worship Services this Week

WORSHIP SERVICES THIS WEEK

Monday, January 30 - Three Hierarchs Divine Liturgy at 9am

Thursday, February 2 - Presentation of Our Lord Divine Liturgy at 9am

Saturday, February 4 - Vespers at 6:00pm

 

 

 

 


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Parish News and Events

MEMORIAL TODAY

Today we celebrate a 1-Year Memorial for the repose of the souls of Nick Theodore and Konstantino Papakirk. We also pray for the repose of the soul of Nick Sezenias. May their memory be eternal.


MEMORIAL LUNCH TODAY

The family of Nicholas Theodore invites everyone to stay for a Memorial Luncheon downstairs following the Divine Liturgy today.


SO WHAT IS SOUPER BOWL OF CARING??

We have jazzed up those familiar red soup cans to get your attention!! So, just what IS this Souper Bowl of Caring? It is a fundraiser for IOCC: International Orthodox Christian Charities, and with a play on words, it coincides with the Season of the Football Super Bowl, which unfortunately will not feature our Steelers. There is a flyer in your bulletin that explains this great philanthropic effort! Donate generously to the NEW and IMPROVED Soup cans in the Narthex. Thank you!


THOSE RECYCLED CANS FEED CHILDREN IN OUR AREA!

Do you drink pop or beer during the week? Did you know that those aluminum cans can feed hungry children if you toss the empties into the right place? FOCUS of West Central PA sponsors a Backpack Feeding Program for hungry children in 3 different school districts, and those aluminum cans that John Neforos collects go a long way to support that program. Collection bins are in the church parking lot next to the paper recycling.


HOUSE BLESSINGS

 House Blessings for the New Year continue this week. You will be called for a time and date.

 


GOYA HOSTS BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT

Next weekend, February 3-5, we help host the Basketball Tournament in Steubenville. This is our Holy Saints Team and volunteers from our Parish are needed! Help is needed to run the clocks, keep score, bake desserts... anything. Tell Kathleen Marvin how you can help!


BASKETBALL TOURNAMENT BAKED GOODIES

If you are baking goodies for the Steubenville Basketball Tournament (Feb. 3-5), please bring them to the Church on Friday, February 3, between 2 and 4:00, and they will be taken for you. If you have any questions, call Kathleen Marvin at 724-601-4166. Thank you!!


REGISTRATION IS OPEN FOR GOYA SPRING RETREAT

Registration is open for the GOYA Spring Retreat at camp@pittsburgh.goarch.org. The Retreat is the weekend of March 31-April 2 and the theme will be “What Matters? Exploring Our Relationship with God’s Creation.”

And Registration for Summer Camp will open on Monday, February 6 at 7pm. As a note, last year one camp session filled up within 9 minutes of opening!!


PHILOPTOCHOS NEWS

Our 2017 Membership Dues must be paid by March 1st. Of this $25 payment, $15 goes to the National Philoptochos Ministries, and the remaining $10 goes to Metropolis Minstries. Anything over $25 goes to our own ministries. Thank you, ladies, for your quick response to this!

We will host the Lenten Supper immediately following the 6pm Presanctified Liturgy on Wednesday, March 1. Members, please bring a lenten covered dish to share or a monetary donation. Everyone is invited to this Fellowship meal!

The Metropolis Daffodil Luncheon is scheduled for Saturday, April 1, in Columbus, Ohio. If anyone is interested in going, please tell Pauline Skeriotis.

In addition to the Dancers' Easter Breads, we will be offering nutrolls for Pascha. Stay tuned for baking dates.


GYRO SALE

The GOYA Gyro Sale is scheduled for Sunday, February 12. Pre-order forms are in the Narthex. Usually we have this on Super Bowl Sunday, but the GOYAns Holy Saints Team is hosting a Basketball Tournament in Steubenville that weekend. Order your Gyros, then come help out at the Tournament!!


GODPARENT SUNDAY IS ON THE CALENDAR

Sunday, February 12, is Godparent Sunday this year, so make plans with your Godchild and Godparent to worship in Church together that day! GAPA is also offering an Artoclasia that day, and GOYA is selling gyros! Come and see that the Lord is good!


AVGOLEMONO SOUP-TO-GO SALE

Take home and enjoy some delicious Avgolemono Soup on Meatfare Sunday, February 19, the last day of eating meat before Great Lent begins.  (The soup is being made by Vasili and Lori Kontoulis.) Please use the order form in the Narthex to order by February 12.  Sponsored by the Hellenic Dancers, this fund raiser will help fund the registration fee for the Fall Metropolis Educational Dancers Workshop. Give your order to Harriet Sickles.


DANCE PRACTICE

Practice will resume on February 15 and 22 for Little Angels (6-6:30) and the Junior Hellenics (6:30-7). There will be no practice during Great Lent, but will resume again after Easter for all three groups to prepare for our July Food Festival!


DATES TO REMEMBER:

ONGOING: Donate to IOCC Souper Bowl of Caring

     Order your Gyros for February 12

     Order your Avgolemono Soup-To-Go for February 19

     Collecting Aluminum Cans for FOCUS Beaver County

Monday, January 30 - Three Hierarchs Divine Liturgy at 9am

Thursday, February 2 - Presentation of Our Lord Divine Liturgy 9am

Friday-Sunday, February 3-5 - Holy Saints Team sponsors Basketball Tournament in Steubenville

Sunday, February 5 - Souper Bowl Sunday for IOCC

Monday, February 6 - Registration for Summer Camp opens at 7pm

Sunday, February 12 - Godparent Sunday

     GAPA Artoclasia

     GOYA Gyro Sale

Sunday, February 19 - Dancers Avgolemono Soup-To-Go Sale

Wednesday, March 1 - Philoptochos Lenten Supper following 6pm Presanctified Liturgy

Saturday, April 1 - Philoptochos Daffodil Luncheon in Columbus, Ohio

Upcoming Weekday Liturgies at 9:00 am:

Monday, February 6 - St. Photios

Friday, February 10 - St. Haralambos

Lenten and Pascha Dates:

Sunday, February 5 - Start of Triodion

Saturday of Souls Liturgies: Feb. 18, 25, March 4

Monday, February 27 - Start of Great Lent

Sunday, March 5 - Sunday of Orthodoxy

Friday, March 31 - Akathist Hymn to the Mother of God

Sunday, April 9 - Palm Sunday, start of Holy Week

Sunday, April 16 - Great and Holy Pascha

 

 


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Wisdom of the Fathers

She had a great perfection of faith. She had no uncertainty about His divine majesty. She had no small measure of the virtue of patience. Yet the pitying Physician of the pitiful disdained her petitions. He kept her waiting for answer in order to demonstrate to us the perseverence of this woman that we can always imitate. She had the characteristics of constancy and humility. She willingly embraced the indignity she received, and even confirmed the Lord`s statement. This woman rightly signifies the faith and devotion of the Church gathered from the nations
Saint Bede
Hom. I. 22, In Lent, Homilies on the Gospels, Bk. One, 216, 217.

He kept her waiting for an answer in order to declare that the minds of His disciples should also be merciful. As human beings they were ashamed of the clamor of the woman as she pursued them publicly, but He Himself knew the character of His mercy.
St. Bede
Hom. I. 22, In Lent, Homilies on the Gospels, Bk. One, 216

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Saints and Feasts

Ignatiosgodbearer
January 29

Removal of the Relics of Ignatius the God-bearer

Saint Ignatius was a disciple of Saint John the Theologian, and a successor of the Apostles, and he became the second Bishop of Antioch, after Evodus. He wrote many epistles to the faithful, strengthening them in their confession, and preserving for us the teachings of the holy Apostles. Brought to Rome under Trajan, he was surrendered to lions to be eaten, and so finished the course of martyrdom about the year 107. The remnants of his bones were carefully gathered by the faithful and brought to Antioch. He is called God-bearer, as one who bare God within himself and was aflame in heart with love for Him. Therefore, in his Epistle to the Romans (ch. 4), imploring their love not to attempt to deliver him from his longed-for martyrdom, he said, "I am the wheat of God, and am ground by the teeth of the wild beasts, that I may be found to be the pure bread of God."

Saint John Chrysostom has a homily in honour of the translation of the Saint's relics (PG 50:587).


30_hierarchs1
January 30

Synaxis of The Three Hierarchs: Basil the Great, Gregory the Theologian, & John Chrysostom

This common feast of these three teachers was instituted a little before the year 1100, during the reign of the Emperor Alexis I Comnenus, because of a dispute and strife that arose among the notable and virtuous men of that time. Some of them preferred Basil, while others preferred Gregory, and yet others preferred John Chrysostom, quarreling among themselves over which of the three was the greatest. Furthermore, each party, in order to distinguish itself from the others, assumed the name of its preferred Saint; hence, they called themselves Basilians, Gregorians, or Johannites. Desiring to bring an end to the contention, the three Saints appeared together to the saintly John Mavropous, a monk who had been ordained Bishop of Euchaita, a city of Asia Minor, they revealed to him that the glory they have at the throne of God is equal, and told him to compose a common service for the three of them, which he did with great skill and beauty. Saint John of Euchaita (celebrated Oct. 5) is also the composer of the Canon to the Guardian Angel, the Protector of a Man's Life. In his old age, he retired from his episcopal see and again took up the monastic life in a monastery in Constantinople. He reposed during the reign of the aforementioned Emperor Alexis Comnenus (1081-1118).


Unmercenaries
January 31

Cyrus & John the Unmercenaries

These Saints lived during the years of Diocletian. Saint Cyrus was from Alexandria, and Saint John was from Edessa of Mesopotamia. Because of the persecution of that time, Cyrus fled to the Gulf of Arabia, where there was a small community of monks. John, who was a soldier, heard of Cyrus' fame and came to join him. Henceforth, they passed their life working every virtue, and healing every illness and disease freely by the grace of Christ; hence their title of "Unmercenaries." They heard that a certain woman, named Athanasia, had been apprehended together with her three daughters, Theodora, Theoctiste, and Eudoxia, and taken to the tribunal for their confession of the Faith. Fearing lest the tender young maidens be terrified by the torments and renounce Christ, they went to strengthen them in their contest in martyrdom; therefore they too were seized. After Cyrus and John and those sacred women had been greatly tormented, all were beheaded in the year 292. Their tomb became a renowned shrine in Egypt, and a place of universal pilgrimage. It was found in the area of the modern day resort near Alexandria named Abu Kyr.


Triphon
February 01

Trypho the Martyr

The Holy Martyr Trypho was from Lampsacus in Phrygia, and as a young man he tended geese. Being filled with the gifts of the Holy Spirit, he also healed sufferings and cast out demons. During the reign of the Emperor Decius, about the year 250, he was betrayed as a Christian and taken to Nicaea, where he was beaten, bound to horses and dragged over rough ground, then dragged naked over nails; his sides were burned with torches; finally he was sentenced to beheading, but gave up his holy soul in his torments before the stroke of the sword. Saint Trypho is one of the Holy Unmercenaries, and is also invoked for the protection of gardens from insects and pests.


Allsaint
February 01

Bridget of Ireland

When Ireland was newly converted to the Christian Faith, the Holy Abbess Bridget devoted herself to the establishment of the monastic life among the women of her country, and founded the renowned convent of Kildare-Kil "Cell (or Church)" Dara "of the Oak." She was especially renowned for her great mercifulness, manifested in her lavish almsgiving and in miracles wrought for those in need. The Book of Armaugh, an ancient Irish chronicle, calls Saint Patrick and Saint Bridget "the pillars of the Irish" and says that through them both, "Christ performed many miracles." She reposed in peace about the year 525.


Preslord
February 02

The Presentation of Our Lord and Savior in the Temple

When the most pure Mother and Ever-Virgin Mary's forty days of purification had been fulfilled, she took her first-born Son to Jerusalem on this, the fortieth day after His birth, that she might present Him in the temple according to the Law of Moses, which teaches that every first-born male child be dedicated to God, and also that she might offer the sacrifice of a pair of turtle-doves or two young pigeons, as required by the Law (Luke 2:22-24; Exod. 13:2; Lev. 12:6-8). On this same day, a just and devout man, the greatly aged Symeon, was also present in the temple, being guided by the Holy Spirit. For a long time, this man had been awaiting the salvation of God, and he had been informed by divine revelation that he would not die until he beheld the Lord's Christ. Thus, when he beheld Him at that time and took Him up into his aged arms, he gave glory to God, singing: "Now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, O Master. . ." And he confessed that he would close his eyes joyfully, since he had seen the Light of revelation for the nations and the Glory of Israel (Luke 2:25-32). From ancient times, the Holy Church has retained this tradition of the churching of the mother and new-born child on the fortieth day and of the reading of prayers of purification.

The Apodosis of the Feast of the Meeting in the Temple is usually on the 9th of February. This, however, may vary if the Feast falls within the period of the Triodion. Should this occur, the Typicon should be consulted for specific information concerning the Apodosis of the Feast.


Symeongodreceiver
February 03

The Synaxis of the Holy and Righteous Symeon the God-Receiver and the Holy Prophetess Anna

Yesterday we celebrated the Meeting of our Lord in the Temple; today we honor the righteous Elder Symeon and Prophetess Anna, who prophesied concerning Him by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit and were the first in Jerusalem to receive Him as the Messiah.


Allsaint
February 04

Isidore of Pelusium

This Saint was from Alexandria and was a disciple of Saint John Chrysostom. He struggled in asceticism in a monastery at Mount Pelusium, and became abbot of the monks struggling in that monastery. He wrote a great many epistles replete with divine grace, wisdom, and much profit. Over 2,000 of them are preserved in Volume 78 of Migne's Patrologia Graeca (PG 78:177-1646); according to some, he wrote over 3,000 epistles, according to others, 10,000. He reposed on February 4, 440.


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