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St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church
Publish Date: 2023-06-04
Bulletin Contents
Pentecost
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St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church

General Information

  • Phone:
  • (509) 547-3968
  • Fax:
  • none / Facebook Group: "Saint Nectarios - Pasco"
  • Street Address:

  • 627 West Bonneville Street

  • Pasco, WA 99301
  • Mailing Address:

  • 627 West Bonneville Street

  • Pasco, WA 99301


Contact Information




Services Schedule

    Online DIVINE LITURGY - 10:00am

or

    In-church TYPICA Reader Service - 10:00am


Past Bulletins


St Nectarios Weekly Bulletin

(Updated June 4th)

Greek Orthodox Metropolis of San Francisco

St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church

A Tri-Cities Christian Orthodox Community

627 West Bonneville St., Pasco, WA 99301 

All are welcome at St. Nectarios!

 

 

 


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Announcements

Untitled

UPCOMING SERVICES

This Week:
 
Friday Evening June 2nd.  7 PM Online - Saint Nectarios Akathist Service
 
Saturday Evening June 3rd.  5 PM Online - Vespers Service, St Nectarios, Tri-Cities WA
 
Sunday Morning June 4th.  10 AM  Online - Divine Liturgy
 
Next Week:
 
Saturday, June the 10th.  10 AM  In-Church - Father Michael Tervo will celebrate Divine Liturgy with us at Saint Nectarios  (the leave-taking of Holy Pentecost).    Mark the date - and join us for the Service and light lunch Fellowship Time following the Typica Service.   Bring a dish to share - or just come and enjoy!
 
Saturday Evening June 10th.  5 PM Online - Vespers Service
 
Sunday Morning June 11th.  10 AM   Online - Divine Liturgy

 


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Current Services Schedule

  • St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church

    June 2023

    Friday, June 2

    7:00PM Online Akathist to St. Nectarios, St. Nectarios, Tricites WA (Zoom)

    Saturday, June 3

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online, St Nectarios, Tri-Cities WA

    Sunday, June 4

    10:00AM Online Divine Liturgy

    Saturday, June 10

    10:00AM ** In-Church Divine Liturgy - Father Michael Tervo

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online, St Nectarios, Tri-Cities WA

    Sunday, June 11

    10:00AM Online Divine Liturgy

    Saturday, June 17

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online, St Nectarios, Tri-Cities WA

    Sunday, June 18

    10:00AM Online Divine Liturgy

    Saturday, June 24

    5:00PM Vespers Service - Online, St Nectarios, Tri-Cities WA

    Sunday, June 25

    10:00AM In-church Typica Reader Service

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Message from Father John

Fatherjohn01

Weekly Message from Father John

THE IMPORTANCE OF THE SUNDAY OF PENTECOST FOR OUR SPIRITUAL LIFE
 
Suddenly, the Holy Spirit descended with a great noise. It enlightened the Apostles and all others present with them. Like fiery tongues, the Holy Spirit set upon their heads and endowed them with divine power for their missionary work. The languages of the pilgrims became known to the Apostles. Now the visitors in Jerusalem were able to understand the Apostles in their own tongue. The pilgrims realized in this experience the Presence of God. Scared by this new reality, they asked the Apostles how they could be saved. Peter said to them, “Repent and be baptized in the Name of Christ!” The words of the Prophets of old are now fulfilled.
 
Three thousand people believed and were baptized on Pentecost Day. They became the first members of the Christian Church. The Holy Spirit, Which Christ had promised to His Apostles at His Ascension to heaven, came in the form of fiery tongues and sat on the heads of the Apostles. The Holy Spirit revealed also to His Apostles the mystery of the Holy Trinity: The Unoriginate Father, the Begotten Son and the Holy Spirit. The Three Persons are One God, Who is revealed to us by the Holy Spirit. The Son is in the Father; and the Father in the Son and in the Holy Spirit.
 
The Holy Scriptures bear witness to this mystery inspired by the Holy Spirit The one, shared, uncreated Glory of the Holy Trinity saves us. God inspires, empowers, and energizes the Church's Sacraments. Inspired by the Holy Spirit, the Orthodox Church confesses:
 
The Beginningless Father, the Begotten Son, and the Holy Spirit. With their common Grace, the one God gives life to us, His rational creatures; As Father, Son and Holy Spirit, God sanctifies the members of His Holy Church. The Orthodox Theology is inspired by the Holy Spirit; it’s not a philosophical deduction. God has revealed it to us through His Holy Apostles and Fathers.
 
This is the reason that the Fathers always proclaimed, “As it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and us…”. They gave us the “dogmata,” the Theological Teachings, inspired by the Holy Spirit.
All of us are called to believe and live our life in a Christian way; to do God’s Holy Will inspired and empowered by our revealed, living Faith. Strengthened by His Divine Grace, to live a Christian way of life: To honor God by our true faith and by always doing God-pleasing deeds.
 
With love,
Fr. John P. Angelis
 

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Saints and Feasts

Pentecost
June 04

Holy Pentecost

After the Saviour's Ascension into the Heavens, the eleven Apostles and the rest of His disciples, the God-loving women who followed after Him from the beginning, His Mother, the most holy Virgin Mary, and His brethren-all together about 120 souls returned from the Mount of Olives to Jerusalem. Entering into the house where they gathered, they went into the upper room, and there they persevered in prayer and supplication, awaiting the coming of the Holy Spirit, as their Divine Teacher had promised them. In the meanwhile, they chose Matthias, who was elected to take the place of Judas among the Apostles.

Thus, on this day, the seventh Sunday of Pascha, the tenth day after the Ascension and the fiftieth day after Pascha, at the third hour of the day from the rising of the sun, there suddenly came a sound from Heaven, as when a mighty wind blows, and it filled the whole house where the Apostles and the rest with them were gathered. Immediately after the sound, there appeared tongues of fire that divided and rested upon the head of each one. Filled with the Spirit, all those present began speaking not in their native tongue, but in other tongues and dialects, as the Holy Spirit instructed them.

The multitudes that had come together from various places for the feast, most of whom were Jews by race and religion, were called Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and so forth, according to the places where they dwelt. Though they spoke many different tongues, they were present in Jerusalem by divine dispensation. When they heard that sound that came down from Heaven to the place where the disciples of Christ were gathered, all ran together to learn what had taken place. But they were confounded when they came and heard the Apostles speaking in their own tongues. Marvelling at this, they said one to another, "Behold, are not all these which speak Galileans? And how hear we every man in our own tongue, wherein we were born?" But others, because of their foolishness and excess of evil, mocked the wonder and said that the Apostles were drunken.

Then Peter stood up with the eleven, and raising his voice, spoke to all the people, proving that that which had taken place was not drunkenness, but the fulfilment of God's promise that had been spoken by the Prophet Joel: "And it shall come to pass in the last days, that I shall pour out of My Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and daughters shall prophesy" (Joel 2:28), and he preached Jesus of Nazareth unto them, proving in many ways that He is Christ the Lord, Whom the Jews crucified but God raised from the dead. On hearing Peter's teaching, many were smitten with compunction and received the word. Thus, they were baptized, and on that day about three thousand souls were added to the Faith of Christ.

Such, therefore, are the reasons for today's feast: the coming of the All-holy Spirit into the world, the completion of the Lord Jesus Christ's promise, and the fulfilment of the hope of the sacred disciples, which we celebrate today. This is the final feast of the great mystery and dispensation of God's incarnation. On this last, and great, and saving day of Pentecost, the Apostles of the Saviour, who were unlearned fishermen, made wise now of a sudden by the Holy Spirit, clearly and with divine authority spoke the heavenly doctrines. They became heralds of the truth and teachers of the whole world. On this day they were ordained and began their apostleship, of which the salvation of those three thousand souls in one day was the comely and marvellous first fruit.

Some erroneously hold that Pentecost is the "birthday of the Church." But this is not true, for the teaching of the holy Fathers is that the Church existed before all other things. In the second vision of The Shepherd of Hermas we read: "Now brethren, a revelation was made unto me in my sleep by a youth of exceeding fair form, who said to me, 'Whom thinkest thou the aged woman, from whom thou receivedst the book, to be?' I say, 'The Sibyl.' 'Thou art wrong,' saith he, 'she is not.' 'Who then is she?' I say. 'The Church,' saith he. I said unto him, 'Wherefore then is she aged?' 'Because,' saith he, 'she was created before all things; therefore is she aged, and for her sake the world was framed."' Saint Gregory the Theologian also speaks of "the Church of Christ ... both before Christ and after Christ" (PG 35:1108-9). Saint Epiphanius of Cyprus writes, "The Catholic Church, which exists from the ages, is revealed most clearly in the incarnate advent of Christ" (PG 42:640). Saint John Damascene observes, "The Holy Catholic Church of God, therefore, is the assembly of the holy Fathers, Patriarchs, Prophets, Apostles, Evangelists, and Martyrs who have been from the very beginning, to whom were added all the nations who believed with one accord" (PG 96, 1357c). According to Saint Gregory the Theologian, "The Prophets established the Church, the Apostles conjoined it, and the Evangelists set it in order" (PG 35, 589 A). The Church existed from the creation of the Angels, for the Angels came into existence before the creation of the world, and they have always been members of the Church. Saint Clement, Bishop of Rome, says in his second epistle to the Corinthians, the Church "was created before the sun and moon"; and a little further on, "The Church existeth not now for the first time, but hath been from the beginning" (II Cor. 14).

That which came to pass at Pentecost, then, was the ordination of the Apostles, the commencement of the apostolic preaching to the nations, and the inauguration of the priesthood of the new Israel. Saint Cyril of Alexandria says that "Our Lord Jesus Christ herein ordained the instructors and teachers of the world and the stewards of His divine Mysteries ... showing together with the dignity of Apostleship, the incomparable glory of the authority given them ... Revealing them to be splendid with the great dignity of the Apostleship and showing them forth as both stewards and priests of the divine altars . . . they became fit to initiate others through the enlightening guidance of the Holy Spirit" (PG 74, 708-712). Saint Gregory Palamas says, "Now, therefore ... the Holy Spirit descended ... showing the Disciples to be supernal luminaries ... and the distributed grace of the Divine Spirit came through the ordination of the Apostles upon their successors" (Homily 24, 10). And Saint Sophronius, Bishop of Jerusalem, writes, "After the visitation of the Comforter, the Apostles became high priests" (PG 87, 3981B). Therefore, together with the baptism of the Holy Spirit which came upon them who were present in the upper chamber, which the Lord had foretold as recorded in the Acts, "ye shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days hence" (Acts 1:5), the Apostles were also appointed and raised to the high priestly rank, according to Saint John Chrysostom (PG 60, 21). On this day commenced the celebration of the Holy Eucharist by which we become "partakers of the Divine Nature" (II Peter 1:4). For before Pentecost, it is said of the Apostles and disciples only that they abode in "prayer and supplication" (Acts 1:14); it is only after the coming of the Holy Spirit that they persevered in the "breaking of bread,"that is, the communion of the Holy Mysteries-"and in prayer" (Acts 2:42).

The feast of holy Pentecost, therefore, determined the beginning of the priesthood of grace, not the beginning of the Church. Henceforth, the Apostles proclaimed the good tidings "in country and town," preaching and baptizing and appointing shepherds, imparting the priesthood to them whom they judged were worthy to minister, as Saint Clement writes in his first Epistle to the Corinthians (I Cor. 42).

All foods allowed during the week following Pentecost.


Allsaint
June 04

Our Father Metrophanes, Archbishop of Constantinople

Saint Metrophanes was born of pagan parents, but believed in Christ at a young age, and came to Byzantium. He lived at the end of the persecution of the Roman Emperors, and became the Bishop of Byzantium from about 315 to 325, during which time Saint Constantine the Great made it the capital of the Roman Empire, calling it New Rome. Saint Metrophanes sent his delegate, the priest Alexander, to the First Ecumenical Council in 325, since he could not attend because of old age. He reposed the same year and was buried by Saint James of Nisibis (celebrated Jan. 13), one of the Fathers present at the First Ecumenical Council. The Canons to the Trinity of the Octoechos are not the work of this Metrophanes but another, who was Bishop of Smyrna about the middle of the ninth century, during the life of Saint Photius the Great.


Martha
June 04

Mary & Martha, the sisters of Lazarus

The Holy Myrrh-bearers Mary and Martha, together with their brother Lazarus, were especially devoted to our Savior, as we see from the accounts given in the tenth chapter of Saint Luke, and in the eleventh and twelfth chapters of Saint John. They reposed in Cyprus, where their brother became the first Bishop of Kition after his resurrection from the dead. See also the accounts on Lazarus Saturday and the Sunday of the Myrrh-bearing Women.


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Hymns of the Day

Apolytikion for Pentecost in the Plagal Fourth Tone

Blessed are You, O Christ our God, who made fishermen all-wise, sending upon them the Holy Spirit and, through them, netting the world. O Loving One, glory to You.

Seasonal Kontakion in the Plagal Fourth Tone

When the Most High came down and confounded tongues of men (Babel), He divided the Nations. When He dispensed the Tongues of Fire, He called all to unity, and with one voice we glorify the Most Holy Spirit.
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Gospel and Epistle Readings

Epistle Reading

Prokeimenon. Plagal Fourth Tone. Psalm 18.4,1.
Their voice has gone out into all the earth.
Verse: The heavens declare the glory of God.

The reading is from Acts of the Apostles 2:1-11.

WHEN THE DAY of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place. And suddenly a sound came from heaven like the rush of a mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting. And there appeared to them tongues as of fire, distributed and resting on each one of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other tongues, as the Spirit gave them utterance. Now there were dwelling in Jerusalem Jews, devout men from every nation under heaven. And at this sound the multitude came together, and they were bewildered, because each one heard them speaking in his own language. And they were amazed and wondered, saying, "Are not all these who are speaking Galileans? And how is it that we hear, each of us in his own native language? Parthians and Medes and Elamites and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontos and Asia, Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, Cretans and Arabians, we hear them telling in our own tongues the mighty works of God."


Gospel Reading

Holy Pentecost
The Reading is from John 7:37-52; 8:12

On the last day of the feast, the great day, Jesus stood up and proclaimed, "If any one thirst, let him come to me and drink. He who believes in me, as the scripture has said, 'Out of his heart shall flow rivers of living water.'" Now this he said about the Spirit, which those who believed in him were to receive; for as yet the Spirit had not been given, because Jesus was not yet glorified.

When they heard these words, some of the people said, "This is really the prophet." Others said, "This is the Christ." But some said, "Is the Christ to come from Galilee? Has not the scripture said that the Christ is descended from David, and comes from Bethlehem, the village where David was?" So there was a division among the people over him. Some of them wanted to arrest him, but no one laid hands on him.

The officers then went back to the chief priests and Pharisees, who said to them, "Why did you not bring him?" The officers answered, "No man ever spoke like this man!" The Pharisees answered them, "Are you led astray, you also? Have any of the authorities or of the Pharisees believed in him? But this crowd, who do not know the law, are accursed." Nikodemos, who had gone to him before, and who was one of them, said to them, "Does our law judge a man without first giving him a hearing and learning what he does?" They replied, "Are you from Galilee too? Search and you will see that no prophet is to rise from Galilee." Again Jesus spoke to them, saying, "I am the light of the world; he who follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life."


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St. Nectarios Services

Overview of St. Nectarios Services

IN-CHURCH: 

Sunday in-church Services.  Most Sundays will have a Greek Orthodox Typica Reader Service starting at 10AM.  However, some Sundays will have a celebration of a Divine Liturgy Service. A Christian Sunday Divine Liturgy Service may be either Greek Orthodox or Coptic Orthodox depending on the availability of a Priest to officiate.  All are welcome to come and celebrate these Divine Liturgy Service.

Saturday Greek Orthodox Divine Liturgy.  Each month, there is normally at least one Saturday Greek Othodox Divine Liturgy Service with a visiting Priest.  

Christian education classes for the youth are held after in-church Divine Liturgy Services

ONLINE: 

Vespers and Other Special Services are normally celebrated online with Father John in Seattle.

The link for joining Zoom on-line Services is

https://goarch.zoom.us/j/98009355049?pwd=UmttUUN2aG4raUc4WS9Zelo1REYxdz09

Most Services will be streamed live to Facebook Group: 'Saint Nectarios - Pasco'

LATEST INFOMATION: The latest updates to the schedule of Services at St. Nectarios may be viewed in the St Nectarios Bulletin using the following link:  The Bulletin is updated whenever changes occur and is, as a result is the best source for most recent Service schedules.

http://bulletinbuilder.org/stnectariospasco/

FACEBOOK GROUP - Saint Nectarios - Pasco.  The faithful may view/participate in the online Services on the Saint Nectarios-Pasco Group on Facebook.  Online Services will be streamed and posted after they are complete. For many of the Services, the text is included to help the faithful follow the Service. To view Saint Nectarios Services, pictures, and other postings on Facebook Group “Saint Nectarios – Pasco” use the Facebook link: 

https://www.facebook.com/groups/334558973222227/ 


St. Nectarios Greek Orthodox Mission Church

 

Donate to St Nectarios Online 
https://bit.ly/30rPubP
   
Have Bulletin input? Have Suggestions/Questions?  Want Help or Information? 
Call the Editor, Jim Droppo, 5O9 366-8745.

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