“Ye know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them,

and they that are great exercise authority upon them.

But it shall not be so among you:

but whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister;

And whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant:

Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto,

but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.” (Matthew 20:25-28, KJV)


The word the Athenians used for their Assembly was Ekklesia, the same word used in the New Testament for Church
(and it is the greatest philological irony in all of Western history that this word,
which connoted equal participation in all deliberation by all members,
came to designate a kind of self-perpetuating, self-protective Spartan gerousia -
which would have seemed patent nonsense to Greek-speaking Christians of New Testament times,
who believed themselves to be equal members of their Assembly.)

- Thomas Cahill, Sailing the Wine-Dark Sea: Why the Greeks Matter




ΦΙΛΟΤΙΜΟ: THE GREEK SECRET


Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Impulsive (adj) : Acting or done without forethought

"All involved in this matter are advised to refrain from any further action whatsoever rela1ed to the issues raised, pending review and resolution of the matter by the Holy Eparchial Synod."

This was the directive from the Holy Synod to our community on October 28 2010.
For the umpteenth time the proistameno of Prophet Elias only managed to prove us (unfortunately) right.
Complete disregard of his superiors, The Holy Synod.
His agenda is above and beyond anything and anyone.
Fr Michael, you sent out a divided stewardship packet, why and with whose permission?
Who are you to decide about this community?

You are just a passer-by.
The tables below are also included in the 2011 stewardship power point.  You and the parish council should read them carefully. http://www.goarch.org/archdiocese/departments/stewardship


- Yannis Armaou

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Greek Americans Should Take Back Their Churches - The National Herald


November 28, 2010

It is time for the local efforts of the historical preservation movement underway among Greek communities around the country to first receive the recognition they deserve and the direct aid they have been denied for so long. It is also time to realize that the churches cannot be a setting simply for the clergy to manage financially or in anyway outside of their religious duties. Churches are the cultural centers of Greek America. Whatever was changed at the bureaucratic level giving the clergy economic and legal status over the physical and financial core of the Greek Orthodox Church in North America needs to be reversed. The congregation needs to be in control of its own destiny and purpose with the clergy only serving in a spiritual capacity. This topic relates to the maintenance and when not already present establishment of the historical and cultural records of all local Greek collectivities in the nation. If this means that the Metropolitans cannot build or sell property as they elect, they should not have ever been given the legal authority to begin with. It is neither a part of our faith nor our long historic tradition that mandates or elevates the clergy over the laity. Please I don’t want anyone to write me about the Turkokratia or the Byzantine Age because we no longer live under those historical, cultural or legal conditions.

The clergy are the honored guests in the houses that the congregation has labored to build. There is no problem with this issue in the nation state of Greece. NO one is called a janissaros in a neighborhood church in Athens re if they do not want to do what the priest wishes. NO one there is told they cannot attend the church their family helped to establish or they will be arrested because the new priest says so. NO one is thrown off the board because the bishop says so. We have a documented historical existence here in North America. With the Greeks in North America the original state issued documents documenting who established and paid for these structures and land that are readily available and often hang framed in the church office, as does a long line of other personal and public historical records. If the priest and bishops cannot serve us on an equal footing then they cannot. If they need then to return to Greece, let them leave, in peace. But if they remain then they must do so as our brothers, colleagues and fellow-Christians not as our unquestioned masters. (emphasis added)

NO PROFESSORS PLEASE
With the churches once again a part of direct community life and control then a second step of offering assistance to the individual communities who wish to maintain their historical and cultural records can begin. In an advisory capacity any number of Greek Americans can be contacted to serve as advisors to the local communities. This advisory group can well serve to inform the local community on which historic, archival and other existing public facilities can help guide and even serve this Hellenic group. This advisory group can easily be drawn from an existing cadre of state historical commissioners, former state folklorists, school superintendents, archivists, librarians, lawyers, genealogists, museum personal, computer specialists as well as those who served as readers for grant applications on the city, state and federal levels. Greek Americans have and continue to occupy all those positions in the daily life of America.

Historical records and documents never have to leave the local community. This advisory group can meet with the local collective and through open discussion determine the wants, needs and capacity of each locale. Simply sharing information on legal forms and formalities that every new American cultural/historical organization must adhere to would be a great service. Educating and alerting the local organizations concerning the public responsibilities of local libraries, historical societies and other existing services would be of great and lasting benefit. Academics need not be involved in this process. Like the priests the tendency to yield to their supposed knowledge or authority causes many on the local level to remain quiet when they know the basic history and cultural conditions far better than anyone from the outside can ever learn. The process of saving historical and cultural documents is more a technical and mechanical issue. Certainly many academics will disagree citing one theoretical study after another. But theory or the notion that thoughts can have a real impact on the world is a fine parlor game for aficionados. But social science theories are not the stuff of science they are just generally agreed upon beliefs.

Do not take my word for it. Go to any local historical society or genealogical organization. How many individuals are archivists or record keepers of one sort or another and how many professors in history? This is not a question of exclusion as much as one of basic utility, the primary goal is record keeping.

Now once again my brothers, sisters and distant Greek-born cousins at the university will say, no, these documents must be collected in such a way so that future historians can make sense of them. I am not advising that we preserve Greek America to give future teachers jobs. I am advocating that we systematically preserve Greek-American history for Greeks living in North America. So that someone with a question about their ancestors can go to the local church library and look it up just as one would do at a neighborhood public library.

In the assessment process each community will have to undergo it may prove to be the case that funds and other resources do not exist within the community itself to preserve or house these material. Other possibilities exist. Examples of alternate possibilities exist all cross Greek America. In Pueblo, Colorado the genealogy collection of a local library now houses more than 200 photographs and other historical materials. In Dayton, Ohio through the offices and skills of a local Greek librarian the community’s records and photographs were placed in the main public library. The Greeks of Lowell Massachusetts have an Internet website with their history and images displayed. Any Greek American community can do the very same. We have to pull together. We have to preserve our own history. We have to stop fighting over who has their name on the top of official stationery. We have run out of time for such petty vulgarities.

Originally published on November 19, 2010

Thursday, December 2, 2010

REFRAIN: verb - to abstain from an impulse to say or do something

All involved in this matter are advised to refrain from any further action whatsoever related to the issues raised, pending review and resolution of the matter by the Holy Eparchial Synod.
 - from the October 28, 2010 letter to N. Colessides by Archimandrite Skordallos, Chief Secretary for the Holy Eparchial Synod  

What part of this instruction is unclear? We are about to receive a highly hedged letter asking for stewardship pledges while we still do not know the decision of the Holy Synod. 


For a group of people who represent those highly anxious to eliminate Greek from services, one would think instructions in English would be comprehended. And, for a group that professes such deep adherence to the wishes of the clergy, one would imagine that the precise instructions given by the Chief Secretary of the Holy Eparchial Synod would be followed TO THE LETTER!


- The Moderators