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St. John Chrysostom Greek Orthodox Church Of Nashville
Publish Date: 2020-07-19
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Allsaint
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St. John Chrysostom Greek Orthodox Church Of Nashville

General Information

  • Phone:
  • (615) 957-2975
  • Street Address:

  • 4602 Indiana Avenue

  • Nashville, TN 37209
  • Mailing Address:

  • P.O. Box 90162

  • Nashville, TN 37209


Contact Information




Services Schedule

Services will be live-streamed via our Facebook page: St. John Chrysostom Greek Orthodox Nashville, TN.

Please see online Calendar for schedule of Services.


Past Bulletins


Announcements

LIVESTREAM SERVICES

Services are Live-streamed on our Facebook page: St. John Chrysostom Greek Orthodox Nashville, TN

In order to reach more people WE NEED YOUR HELP!  
Please offer your time and skills to help us Livestream on Youtube, Vimeo, or other various platforms so that others may be reached and learn of the Orthodox Church.

NOT JUST OURSELVES

We may not know when exactly this current pandemic will end, but it too will pass.  Throughout history, on average 3 pandemics occur per century.  Yet the Church has continued and grown through the centuries.  The majority of our Parish are preferring to heed the common precautions that are proven to be the most effective means of preventing the spread of disease.  Among our brothers and sisters, think of those who might be most at risk within our parish community.  There may be those who have underlying conditions that place them in harm's way.  Let's be mindful of our vulnerability, and comply with the guidelines that health professionals around the world have asked everyone to embrace.  Let's humble our pride that tells us that we are invincible.  Let's think of others well-being, rather than our own 'freedom'.  All this being said, this does not prevent us from coming to church to maintain and support the church. Let's ask ourself, 'how could the Church (and here understand our Faith and the Gospel) have survived through the centuries if people did not come to maintain and support the church'?  This can be done now on an individual basis or with someone else as long as we follow the health guidelines.  Many of the needs can be accomplished indoors.  Some needs are outdooors and allow greater freedom.

If you are a member, or attend St. John Chrysostom Church, and are not already doing so, please contribute.  


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Weekly Calendar

  • St. John Chrysostom Church Calendar

    July 19 to August 2, 2020

    Sunday, July 19

    8:30AM Matins (Orthros)

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy

    Wednesday, July 22

    5:30PM Paraklesis, Prayers of supplication in times of distress.

    Saturday, July 25

    5:30PM Great Vespers

    Sunday, July 26

    8:30AM Matins (Orthros)

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy

    Wednesday, July 29

    5:30PM Paraklesis, Prayers of supplication in times of distress.

    7:00PM St. John to host OCN Podcast with Fr. Michael Marcantoni

    Saturday, August 1

    11:00AM Zhernokleyev Baptism

    5:30PM Great Vespers

    Sunday, August 2

    8:30AM Matins (Orthros)

    10:00AM Divine Liturgy

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Saints and Feasts

Allsaint
July 19

Saint Theodore, Bishop of Edessa

Our Father among the Saints Theodore was born in Edessa of Mesopotamia. At the age of about nineteen, he became a monk at the Monastery of Mar Sabbas in Palestine. After he had spent some twenty-four years there, he was chosen to become Bishop of Edessa, about the year 836. The city of Edessa at that time was beleaguered with many heresies, among them the Arian, Nestorian, Eutychian, and Manichean. Wishing to free the Orthodox of Edessa from the injustices of the many heretics, he undertook a journey to Babylon in Persia - that is, Baghdad - to ask the Persian King, who then ruled over all Syria, to use his power to protect the Orthodox of Edessa. When he arrived he learned that the King was gravely sick; but gaining admission to him, the holy Bishop Theodore restored him to health through prayer, and, after speaking to him many days in secret about the dispensation of God, converted him to Christ, baptizing him with the name of John. Returning to Edessa having accomplished his purpose, Theodore later learned by revelation that King John, with his three Arab body-guards who had been baptized with him, had professed their faith openly and received martyrs' crowns at the hands of the Persian Moslems. This was in the days when the blessed Theodora and her son Michael reigned in Constantinople. Not long thereafter, Theodore retired to the Monastery of Mar Sabbas, and ended his days.


Hlyfthrs
July 19

Sunday of the Holy Fathers of the 4th Ecumenical Council

On the Sunday that falls from the 13th to the 19th of the present month, we chant the Service to the 630 Holy and God-bearing Fathers who came together for the 4th Ecumenical Council who assembled in Chalcedon in 451, to condemn Eutyches, who taught that there was only one nature, the divine, in Christ after the Incarnation, and Dioscorus, Patriarch of Alexandria, who illegally received Eutyches back into communion and deposed Saint Flavian, Patriarch of Constantinople, who had excommunicated Eutyches.

In the Slavic tradition, on this Sunday, the Fathers of the first six Ecumenical Councils are all commemorated.


Allsaint
July 19

Macrina the Righteous, sister of St. Basil

Saint Macrina, the elder sister of Saints Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa, was sought after by many as a bride because of her beauty, wisdom, and illustrious birth, and in tender youth was espoused by her parents to a bridegroom of fitting nobility. When her betrothed died, Macrina refused any other suitors, and devoted herself to a life of virginity, asceticism, and prayer. When her brother Basil returned from a brilliant career in the best schools of Constantinople and Athens, puffed up with not a little youthful pride-for knowledge puffeth up-it was the ardent admonitions and holy example of his blessed sister that persuaded him to turn from seeking worldly glory to the service of God. Saint Macrina founded a convent, where she ended her earthly life in the year 379, and was buried by her brother Gregory, who wrote a moving account of her last days and his grief at seeing such a light pass out of the world.


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Greek Orthodox Archdiocese News

Hagia Sophia: The Violation of a Symbol

07/16/2020

Flipping through an album of travel photos the other day, I recalled lighting a candle at the Taj Mahal a few years after the first Christian Indian Prime Minister decided to grant the temple to the local Church. I admired once again the handmade rugs adorning the floor of the Notre Dame de Paris mosque, which the French government had handed over to the Muslim community in order to save it from decay, as the declining number of Christians attending the service could not cover its maintenance costs.

Holy Eparchial Synod Designates July 24 as a Day of Mourning

07/16/2020

Again and most fervently, the Members of the Holy Eparchial Synod of Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, under the presidency of His Eminence Archbishop Elpidophoros of America, write to you with urgency, determination, and great faith; for we have heard your cries of anguish and pain over the seizure of the Great Church of Holy Wisdom, our Ἁγία Σοφία.

Common Statement with Cardinal Dolan Regarding Hagia Sophia

07/15/2020

As Brothers in Christ, and the leaders of our respective communities here in New York, we lament and decry the decision of the Turkish government to change the status quo of the world renown Hagia Sophia, and re-convert this monument of human and divine achievement into a mosque.

GOA Center for Family Care Teams with UOC St. Nicholas Family Camp for Families with Special Needs, Offers Virtual Parent Retreat

07/14/2020

In the wake of COVID-19 social distancing measures, The Saint Nicholas Family Camp offered at the Ukrainian Orthodox All Saints Camp in Emlenton, PA provided an online option this year. The program seeks to create a church camp experience for families who have children with all varieties of special needs.

Archbishop Elpidophoros Interview with BBC about Hagia Sophia

07/13/2020

This weekend, His Eminence Archbishop Elpidophoros was interviewed by the BBC’s Julian Marshall concerning the conversation of Hagia Sophia into a mosque. Below is a transcript of the interview.

The Conversion of Saint Sophia Into a Mosque: A Personal Reflection

07/13/2020

The Muslim President Erdogan struck a terrible blow to our beloved Ecumenical Patriarchate, to World Orthodoxy and Christianity in general by converting Agia Sophia into a functioning mosque. I am personally deeply saddened by the Turkish government’s decision.
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