We warmly welcome all visitors and seekers to our church!

We welcome anyone visiting for the first time, and we trust that your experience here will be uplifting and enriching. The Orthodox Christian Church is a community of local Churches whose roots are the ancient and native Christian communities of the biblical world. Its centers are in Jerusalem, Syria, Egypt, Asia Minor, and by extension, Greece, Cyprus, Russia, North America, and worldwide.

As a continuation of the ancient Church, we engage the whole person, heart, mind, and all senses in divine worship. This experience has been so influential to seekers in the past that it was often said, “We knew not whether we were in heaven or on earth. We knew only that, there, God dwelt among men” (Russian Primary Chronicle). That experience of heaven on earth and God in our midst forms the heart of all Orthodox worship.

Our worship culminates in the sharing of Holy Communion, which unites us with the Divine and expresses the profound unity in faith and life among all Orthodox believers. Since Holy Communion expresses that profound unity in belief and practice, it is reserved for observant Orthodox Christians, who have adequately prepared themselves with prayer, fasting, and recent confession. This is because the Orthodox choose not to make an external display of unity with other Christian groups when actual unity of faith and practice does not exist.

While working to restore the full communion that did exist among Christians in antiquity, today, we offer the blessed bread (antidoron​) after the liturgy as a gift of hospitality and of growing unity offered to all present. If you want to learn more about the Orthodox way of life or have questions about worship or Holy Communion, please approach Fr. John during our fellowship coffee hour following the liturgy.

Thank you for visiting our website. Please join us for one of our many services on Sunday morning or during the week. For a complete schedule of services, please check our Weekly Bulletin and Community Calendar. If you have questions, contact our parish office at (215) 635-0316 or office@anngoc.org.

 

Services Schedule

We invite you to worship with us on Sundays and on holy days, attending Matins at 8:30 and Divine Liturgy from 9:30 to 11 a.m. Our services are in English and Koine Greek, the language of the New Testament. Then, join us for coffee and fellowship.

Holy Anastasis ~ Midnight Pascha (Easter) Resurrection Liturgy

 

THINGS I WISH I'D KNOWN

by Frederica Mathewes-Green

Welcome to the Orthodox Church!

Several things about our worship differ from the services of other churches, whether Roman Catholic, liturgical Protestant, or evangelical. To help alleviate confusion, here are twelve things I wish someone had explained to me before the first time I visited an Orthodox Church.

1. A Sense of Holiness

If you are from a Protestant or non-liturgical tradition, you may feel overwhelmed the minute you walk in the door of an Orthodox church. You will be surrounded by a blaze of color in the priests’ vestments and the icons that adorn the walls. The pungent odor of incense will assault your nose, possibly making you sneeze. Rich, deeply moving, but unfamiliar music will fill your ears. All around you, people will be doing things–lighting candles, kissing icons, making the sign of the cross, bowing, standing in prayer–everything but sitting still. 

This may seem pretty strange to someone accustomed to four bare walls and a pulpit.

It is important to remember that none of this is an end in itself. Everything we see, hear, smell, touch, taste, or do in the Orthodox Church has one purpose and one purpose only: to lead us closer to God. Since God created us with physical bodies and senses, we believe He desires us to use our bodies and senses to grow closer to Him.

2. Stand Up, Stand Up for Jesus

In the Orthodox tradition, the faithful stand through nearly the entire service. Really. In some Orthodox churches, there won’t even be any pews, just a few chairs scattered at the edges of the room for the elderly and infirm. Expect some variation in practice: other churches, especially those that purchased existing church buildings, will have well-used pews. If you find the amount of standing too challenging, you’re welcome to take a seat. It gets easier with practice.

3. By This Sign, Pray

Saying that we make the cross sign frequently would be an understatement. We sign ourselves whenever the Trinity is invoked, whenever we venerate the cross or an icon, and on many other occasions in the course of the Liturgy. But people aren't expected to do everything the same way. Some cross themselves three times in a row, and some finish by sweeping their right hand to the floor. Before venerating an icon, people often cross themselves twice, bowing each time with their right hand to the floor, then kiss the icon, then cross themselves and bow again. Don’t worry; that doesn't mean you have to follow suit.

We cross with our right hands, touching forehead, chest, right shoulder, then left shoulder, the opposite of Catholics/Episcopalians. We hold our hands in a prescribed way: thumb and first two fingertips pressed together, the last two fingers pressed down to the palm. Here, as elsewhere, the Orthodox impulse is to reinforce the faith in everything we do. Can you figure out the symbolism? (The three fingers held together represent the Trinity; the two fingers against the palm represent the two natures of Christ.)

4. Kneeling

Generally, we don’t kneel on Sundays. We do sometimes prostrate. This is unlike prostration in the Catholic tradition, lying flat on the floor. To make a prostration, we kneel, place our hands on the floor, and touch our foreheads between our hands. At first, prostration feels embarrassing, but no one else is embarrassed, so after a while, it feels more natural.

Sometimes, we do this and get right back up again, as during the prayer of St. Ephraim the Syrian, which is used frequently during Lent. Other times we get down and stay there awhile, as during a portion of the eucharistic prayer.

Not everyone prostrates. Some kneel, stand with their heads bowed, or sit crouched over. Standing there feeling awkward is all right, too. No one will notice if you don’t prostrate. In Orthodoxy, there is an acceptance of individualized expressions of piety rather than a sense that people are watching you and getting offended if you do it wrong.

One former Episcopal priest said that seeing people prostrate themselves was one of the things that made him most eager to become Orthodox. He thought, “That’s how we should be before God.”

5. Pucker Up

We kiss things. When we first enter the church, we kiss the icons (Jesus on the feet and saints on the hands, ideally). You’ll also notice that some kiss the chalice, some kiss the edge of the priest’s vestment as he passes by, the acolytes kiss his hand when they give him the censer, and we all line up to kiss the cross at the end of the service.

We kiss each other (“Greet one another with a kiss of love,” 1 Peter 5:14) before we take communion. When Catholics or Episcopalians pass the peace, they give a hug, handshake, or peck on the cheek; that’s how Westerners greet each other.

In Orthodoxy, different cultures are at play: Greeks and Arabs kiss once on each cheek, and the Slavs return for a third. Parishes with many American converts may give a hearty bear hug, while some parishes omit the kiss of peace entirely. Follow the lead of those around you and try not to bump your nose. The usual greeting is, “Christ is in our midst,” with the response, “He is and ever shall be.” Don’t worry about getting it wrong. The greeting is not the previously familiar, “The peace of the Lord be with you,” nor is it, “Hi, nice church you have here.”

6. Blessed Bread & Consecrated Bread

Only Orthodox may take communion, but anyone may have some blessed bread. Here’s how it works: the round communion loaf, baked by a parishioner, is imprinted with a seal. In the preparation service before the Liturgy, the priest cuts out a section of the seal and sets it aside, called the “Lamb.” The rest of the bread is cut up and placed in a large basket and the priest blesses it.

During the eucharistic prayer, the Lamb is consecrated to be the Body of Christ, and the chalice of wine is consecrated as His Blood. Here’s the surprising part: the priest places the Lamb in the chalice. When we receive communion, we file up to the priest, standing and opening our mouths wide while he gives us a portion of the wine-soaked bread from a spoon. He also prays over us, calling us by our first name or the saint's name we chose when we were baptized or chrismated (received into the Church).

As we file past the priest, we come to an altar boy holding a basket of blessed bread. People will take portions for themselves, visitors, and non-Orthodox friends around them. If someone hands you a piece of blessed bread, do not panic; it is not the Eucharistic body. It is a sign of fellowship so that even those who don’t receive communion can share in the common loaf.

7. No General Confession?

In our experience, we don’t have any general sins; they’re all quite specific. There is no complete confession prayer in the Liturgy. Orthodox are expected to make regular, private confessions to Christ in the presence of their priest.

The pastor's role is much more that of a spiritual father than it is in other denominations. He is not called by his first name alone but is referred to as “Father John." 

Another difference you will probably notice is in the Nicene Creed, which may be said or sung, depending on the parish. In the Creed, we affirm that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father, but we don’t add “and the Son,” as Western denominations do. In this, we adhere to the Creed as it was originally written.

8. Music, Music, Music

About seventy-five percent of the service is congregational singing. Usually, cantors or a choir lead the people in singing, with the level of congregational response varying from parish to parish. The style of music also varies, from very Oriental-sounding solo chant in an Arabic church to more Western-sounding four-part harmony in a Russian church, with many variations in between.

This constant singing is a little overwhelming at first; it feels like getting on the first step of an escalator and being carried along in a rush until you step off ninety minutes later. It has been fairly said that the Liturgy is one continuous song.

What keeps this from being exhausting is that it’s pretty much the same song, week to week. Relatively little changes from Sunday to Sunday; the same prayers and hymns fall in the same places, and you know it by heart before long. Then you fall into the presence of God in a way you never can when flipping from prayer book to bulletin to hymnal.

9. No Shortcuts

Is there a concise way to say something? Can extra adjectives be deleted? Can the briskest, most pointed prose be boiled down one more time to a more refined level? Then it’s not Orthodox worship. If there’s a longer way to say something, the Orthodox will find it. In Orthodox worship, more is always more in every area, including prayer. When the priest or deacon intones, “Let us complete our prayer to the Lord,” expect to stand there still fifteen minutes later.

The original Liturgy lasted over five hours; those people must have been on fire for God. The Liturgy of St. Basil edited this down to about two and a half, and later (around AD 400) the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom further reduced it to about one and a half. Most Sundays, we use the St. John Chrysostom Liturgy, although for some services (e.g., Sundays in Lent, Christmas Eve), we use the longer Liturgy of St. Basil.

When you arrive for Divine Liturgy on Sunday morning, worship will already be in progress, and you will feel chagrined at arriving late. You are not late; the priest, cantors, and some parishioners are just finishing the earlier preparatory services, which began about an hour before. Divine Liturgy follows on its heels, with the posted starting time only approximate. Before Matins, the priest has other preparatory services; he will be at the altar for over three hours on Sunday morning, “standing in the flame,” as one Orthodox priest put it. Orthodoxy is not for people who find church boring.

10. Our Champion Leader

We love Mary, and it shows. What can we say? She’s His Mom. We often address her as “Theotokos,” which means “Mother of God.” She made our salvation possible by providing the physical means for God to become man. Not that we think she or any of the other saints have magical powers or are demigods. When we sing, “Holy Theotokos, save us,” we don’t mean “save” in an eternal sense, as we would pray to Christ; we mean “protect, defend, take care of us here on earth.” Just as we ask for each other’s prayers, we ask for the prayers of Mary and the other saints. They’re not dead, after all, just departed to the other side.

Icons surround us, in part, to remind us that all the saints are joining us invisibly in our worship. 

11. The Three Doors

Every Orthodox church will have an iconostasis (“icon-stand”) before its altar. In a mission parish, it can be as simple as a large image of the Virgin and Child on an easel on the left and a matching image of Christ on the right. In a more established church, the iconostasis may be a literal wall adorned with many icons. The basic set-up of two large icons creates three doorways if you use your imagination. The central opening, in front of the altar itself, usually has two doors, called the “Royal Doors,” because that is where the King of Glory comes out to the congregation in the Eucharist.

Only the priest and deacons, who bear the Eucharist, use the Royal Doors. If there is a complete iconostasis, the openings on the other sides of the two main icons have doors with icons of angels or deacon-saints (like St. Stephen and St. Philip); they are termed the “Deacon’s Doors.” Altar boys and others with business behind the altar use these, although no one will go through any doors without an appropriate reason. Altar service–priests, deacons, altar boys–is restricted to males.

Females are invited to participate in every other area of church life. Their contribution has been honored equally with that of males since the days of the martyrs; you can’t look around an Orthodox church without seeing Mary and other holy women. In most Orthodox churches, women do everything else men do: lead congregational singing, paint icons, teach classes, read the epistle, and serve on the parish council.

12. Are Americans Welcome?

Flipping through the Yellow Pages in a large city, you might see multiple Orthodox churches: Greek, Romanian, Carpatho-Russian, Antiochian, Serbian, etc. Is Orthodoxy so tribal? Do these divisions represent theological squabbles and schisms? Not at all. All these Orthodox bodies are one church. The ethnic designation refers to the parish’s “jurisdiction” and identifies which bishops hold authority there. There are about 1.2 million Orthodox in North America and 250 million worldwide, making Orthodoxy the second-largest Christian communion.

The astonishing thing about this ethnic multiplicity is its theological and moral unity. Orthodox worldwide hold unanimously to the fundamental Christian doctrines taught by the Apostles and handed down by their successors, the bishops, throughout the centuries.

One could attribute this unity to a historical accident.

We would attribute it to the Holy Spirit.

Why, then, the multiplicity of ethnic churches? These national designations represent geographic realities. Since North America is also a geographic unity, one day, we will have a unified national church–an American Orthodox Church. This was the original plan, but it didn't happen that way due to several complicated historical factors. Instead, each ethnic group of Orthodox immigrants to this country developed its own church structure. This multiplication of Orthodox jurisdictions is a temporary aberration, and much prayer and planning are going into breaking through these unnecessary walls.

Currently, the most prominent American jurisdictions are the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, the Orthodox Church in America (with Russian roots), and the Antiochian Archdiocese (with Middle Eastern roots). Services will differ in the language used, the type of music, and a few other particulars, but the Liturgy is substantially the same.

I wish it could be said that every local parish eagerly welcomes newcomers. However, some are still so close to their immigrant experience that they are mystified about why outsiders would be interested. Visiting several Orthodox parishes will help you learn where you’re most comfortable. You will probably be looking for one that uses plenty of English in its services. Many parishes with high proportions of converts will have services entirely in English.

Orthodoxy seems startlingly different at first, but it becomes less so as the weeks go by. It will begin to feel more and more like home and draw you into the Kingdom of God. I hope your first visit to an Orthodox church will be enjoyable and won’t be your last.