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  • Announcement of Pastoral Retreat of the Diocese of Montréal & Canada. March, 2018

    26 January 2018

    FROM THE CHANCELLERY OF THE DIOCESE
    To all the rectors and clergy of the parishes of the Canadian Diocese,
    to all the members of the Diocesan Council of the Canadian Diocese.

    Notice

    You are hereby informed that, between March 5 and March 7, 2018, at the Russian Orthodox Church of “Our Lady of Smolensk”, 5 Birch Rd, Box 2-6, Jacksons Point, ON L0E 1L0, phone (416) 574-1221, the the Annual Pastoral Lenten Retreat of the Clergy of the Diocese of Canada will be held under my presidency.

    Participation in the Clergy Retreat are obligatory for all clergymen of the Diocese. If, for some important reason, it prove impossible to travel to Jacksons Point on the designated days, we ask that you inform us well in advance, in writing, at the address of the Diocesan Administration, detailing such reasons.

    All the questions regarding arrival and agenda of our meeting may be discussed with Diocesan Council Secretary Rev. Alexis Pjawka, tel. 613-316-98; e-mail: fr.alexis@memorialchurch.ca, or with the administrator of the Diocesan Chancellery and my personal secretary, subdeacon Yuri G. Miloslavsky at the above address, phone number, and e-mail address of the chancellery of the Diocesan Administration in Montreal.

    With the questions regarding accommodation in the hotel, or, if possible, in the private homes of parishioners, please contact the rector of the Our Lady of Smolensk parish Rev. Maxim Abroskine, (75 Brule Lakeway Jacksons Point, ON L0E 1L0) at (416) 574-1221 and/or e-mail: fr.maxim.a@gmail.com. We remind you that the cost of living in a hotel for the clergy should be paid by their parishes.

    We remind our clergy that they should bring with them vestments of a lenten (purple) color.

    Below find a tentative agenda for our meeting in Jacksons Point

    Monday, March 5
    3:00 PM Gathering of the participants at the Church of “Our Lady of Smolensk”
    3:30 Coffee/Tea
    4:00 Prayer & Convocation of the Pastoral Meeting.
    6:00 Great Compline
    7:00 Supper

    Tuesday, March 6
    8:45 AM Morning Prayers
    9:00 Breakfast/Coffee/Tea
    9:45 Continuation of the Pastoral Meeting’s Deliberations
    1:30 PM Luncheon & Break
    3:00 Resumption of the Pastoral Meeting. Lecture of Rev. Deacon Andrei
    Psarev (Holy Trinity Orthodox Seminary, Jordanville, USA)
    5:00 Prayer rule before Holy Communion
    6:00 Matins & Confession
    8:00 Supper

    Wednesday, March 7
    8:30 AM Greeting of the Bishop; Hours; Hierarchal Divine Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts
    12:00 Luncheon
    1:30 PM Prayer & Departure

    Participants will be informed in greater detail of the sequence of sessions.

    +Gabriel,
    Archbishop of Montréal & Canada
    January 10/23, 2018

  • Decree of plate collection for the needs of Holy Trinity Orthodox Seminary in Jordanville.

    23 January 2018

    MEMORANDUM

    To the Reverend Rectors, Clergy & Parishioners
    Of the Diocese of Canada

    You are hereby reminded that, in accordance with the decision reached and confirmed by the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, on one of the Sundays closest to the feast day of the Synaxis of the Three Holy Hierarchs, which falls on 30 January/12 February 2018, a special plate collection is to be taken up in all the churches of our Diocese for the needs of our Holy Trinity Orthodox Seminary, in Jordanville.
    It is our sacred duty to prepare educated pastors in our Seminary, and—what is especially important today—without encumbrances. Each of us should, to the utmost of his abilities, take up this task with diligence.
    As you have been reminded more than once, the reverend rectors should watch their young parishioners, since it is possible that some of them may show a readiness to study in our Seminary, so as later to take up the obedience of priests.
    I order the reverend rectors to make the aforementioned collection on Sunday, January 29/ February 11, preceding it with an edifying sermon appropriate to the occasion, addressed to the parishioners, reminding them of the glorious history of our Seminary and the very important role it plays in our most difficult times.

    Gabriel,
    Archbishop of Montréal & Canada

    January 9/22, 2018

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  • Repose of Archpriest Georgiy Primak.

    5 January 2018

    Sorry, this entry is only available in Русский.

  • Nativity Epistle of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion of Eastern America and New York, First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia

    4 January 2018

    NEW YORK: January 4, 2018

    Beloved in the Lord Brethren Archpastors, Honorable Fathers,
    Brothers and Sisters, God-Beloved Flock of the Russian Church Abroad:

    It is with a feeling of the greatest joy that I express my heartfelt greetings on the Nativity of our Lord Jesus Christ and the approaching feast day of the Baptism of the Lord!

    As expressed in one of our church prayers celebrating this holy event, when God deemed it good to appear on Earth, the entire world hastened to bring him gifts: “The Angels offer a hymn; the heavens, a star; the Wise Men, gifts; the shepherds, their wonder; the earth, its cave; the wilderness, a manger.”

    What will we offer as a gift to the Almighty God, Who is now born a helpless Infant? “My son, give me thine heart” (Proverbs 23:26), says the Lord. Our hearts, our love, is the only gift most worthy in the eyes of God. To offer God one’s heart means to give Him all of ourselves: our mind in obeying the Gospel, our will and obedience to the commandments, submitting and actively striving for God, not as a servant but as His offspring, for whom happiness and bliss is to live in Christ and with Him.

    In this past year, the fullness of the Local Russian Orthodox Church prayerfully marked the 100th anniversary of the sorrowful events connected with the Revolution and the beginning of the epoch of godless persecutions, but also the 100th anniversary of the reestablishment of the Patriarchate in Russia, when St Tikhon, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia the Confessor, ascended to the Patriarchal throne, which was to be his personal Golgotha. In 2018, we intend to continue this prayerful commemoration, remembering Holy Hieromartyrs Vladimir of Kiev, Andronik, Archbishop of Perm, the Righteous Royal Passion-bearers, Holy Grand Duchess Elizabeth and Nun Barbara, who offered their hearts to Christ, the Church and their people to the extent that no earthly power could tear them from God’s love, no earthly circumstances: not “tribulation, or distress, or persecution” (Romans 8:35).

    And so as we celebrated the Nativity of Christ and participate in the prayerful commemoration of this year, let us seek out the renewal of our inner strength and edification, let us pay heed to both Holy Scripture and the history of our Fatherland, let us strive to learn of the lives of these holy people and contemplate their personalities in order to enrich ourselves spiritually and intellectually. Let us bring these labors as a gift to the Child Who offered Himself to the Cross, remembering that we must extract from ourselves our wicked and dark hearts, so that in exchange for this Sacrifice we receive the gift of peace in our hearts, bright and renewed, a gift earned by the Holy Martyrs and Confessors of the Russian Church.

    As we bend our knee before the Christ Child and joyously experience this world-saving event, I prayerfully ask on behalf of all of you God’s mercies and blessings, heavenly aid in your labors and good deeds, good health, joyful celebrations and a happy New Year!
    With love in the Nascent Christ,

    +HILARION,
    Metropolitan of Eastern America and New York,
    First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

    Nativity of Christ 2017/2018.

  • Nativity epistle of His Eminence, Archbishop Gabriel. 2018

    4 January 2018

    The Most Reverend Archbishop Gabriel
    of Montreal and Canada

    The Nativity Epistle

    To the clergy and all the faithful flock of the Canadian diocese

    Beloved in Christ brothers and sisters!

    The great and joyful feast of the birth of Christ in the flesh, the appearance in the world of the
    infant Christ, born of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary, is an historical event. It is not a
    coincidence that our forefathers felt that the events tied to the Nativity of Christ as related in the
    Gospels were events that were not far removed from what they had experienced in their own
    past. Metropolitan Anthony, the Abba of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia,
    remarked: “After all, the Child born in Bethlehem soon became a refuge in a foreign land.” In
    the preceding year of 2017 we remembered a mournful anniversary – the 100th anniversary of
    the Russia’s historical tragedy, the lessons of which our people have not yet fully
    comprehended.
    The ever-memorable Metropolitan Anastasy said the following prophetic words 80 years ago:
    “There is nothing more dangerous, than if Russia will wish to adopt something from its sad
    inheritance, left to it by corrupt bolshevism: anything, which has been touched by its
    decomposing atheistic hand, is at risk of being once more infected by the old leprosy.”
    The new year brings with it the 100-year anniversary of a new massacre of the infants: the death
    of the Russian royal family, including the innocent children of the last Russian emperor. The
    loss of the Russian emperor, who was anointed by God and had a special restraining
    interdiction before the throne of God, brought about innumerable woes not only for Russia, but
    for the whole world. Now, when we hope, the time has come for the Russian people to return
    to the ideals of Holy Russia, we have faith that the prayers of the royal passion-bearers at the
    throne of God are heard and that the Lord will not and has not forgotten the Russian land.
    The joy of the birth of Christ in Bethlehem could not be darkened by the anger which boiled up
    during this greatest of events in the history of mankind: the appearance of the Saviour of the
    world. Brothers and sisters, when we remember the wisemen’s gifts of gold, frankincense and
    myrrh brought to the manger in Bethlehem let us not forget about the gifts that we should bring
    to our Lord throughout our earthly life: “Let us earnestly open the treasure chest of our hearts
    and bring Him good deeds – faith, hope and love” (Stichira on ‘Lord I have cried’ for December
    28).

    Christ is Born! Glorify Him!
    GABRIEL
    Archbishop of Montreal and Canada

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