Archive | News & Notes RSS feed for this section

TLC-2 Ministry to Expand; Participate on Panel

As the TLC-2 ministry gears up this Fall to assist more mothers of newborn babies with prepared meals, the group is now partnering with Students for Life and the Orthodox Christian Fellowship to support Penn Staters who make the right choice to keep their infants. This month, representatives from TLC-2 will participate on a panel at the Penn State Pregnancy Resource Forum on campus to offer prolife solutions to pregnant students. The forum takes place on Wednesday, October 26 at 7:30 p.m. at 129A HUB.

For more information on TLC-2 or to join the mailing list, email tlc-2@holytrinity-oca.org.

 

My Mission Trip to Ukraine

Mission Trip to Ukraineby Christopher McNulty

On August 4 through August 21 I was blessed with the opportunity to go on the 2011 Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) of the USA Mission Trip to Ukraine. We traveled to two orphanages outside of Kiev: one in Puhachiv which houses around 90 girls, most with mental disabilities, and the other in Znamyanka which houses over 100 orphans, most with either physical or mental disabilities.

The mission trip is held twice a year, once in the summer and once over the winter holidays, and the missionaries who go help by engaging in projects to improve the facilities, aiding the staff with physical and massage therapy for the children, and, most importantly, spending time playing with and caring for the children.

This year we were able to accomplish several things in the two orphanages we visited. Besides the important time we were able to spend playing with and working with the children, we were able to be a part of the opening of a Montessori Center in Puhachiv, to take girls from Puhachiv outside of the orphanage to a local park, to paint a mural outside of the children’s rooms in Znamyanka, and to take several physically disabled kids from the orphanage in Znamyanka into the town.

My experience in Ukraine was unforgettable: from the moment we arrived at an orphanage to the moment we left, each and every child showed unconditional love for everyone who visited. It was unbelievable that the simple act of holding hands, sitting next to, or even just smiling at a child brought so much excitement and happiness to them.

2011 Mission Trip to Ukraine 748The children of these orphanages don’t usually get the opportunity to get outside of the complexes and they don’t get to experience life outside of the orphanage. The work done on these mission trips is invaluable to these children, and the help of Children of Chornobyl Relief and Development Fund (CCRDF) and UOC of USA has been integral to the improvement of these orphanages from the condition they were in.

The conditions of most of the orphanages in Ukraine were, and some continue to be, poor. Many of the orphanages built under Soviet reign were not built to last and are falling apart, and many of the orphanages obtain minimal amounts of funding from the government. Some orphanages are flooded with large numbers of mentally or physically handicapped orphans that were left there either because their parents couldn’t afford to take care of them or because it was recommended by a physician. Because many of the orphanages are understaffed, the living conditions in these places were horrendous: many of the children were given minimal amounts of care, there was little to no sanitary measures taken, and many children died.

However, with the aid of the CCRDF and the UOC of USA, living conditions have improved greatly. In Znamyanka alone, the death rate has declined from 20 children in 2000, to none this year. Money goes toward improving facilities and funding necessities like diapers and baby wipes. It is also is used for emergency situations: for instance, funds paid to heat an orphanage during a particularly harsh win-ter, which most likely saved many children’s lives.

With the help of those who support this cause, the living conditions in these orphanages will continue to improve, and the lives of the children who live there will greatly improve as well. Thanks to everyone at Holy Trinity who helped make my trip to Ukraine possible!

Documentary to Expose Reality of Modern Sex Slavery

On Tuesday, Sept. 27 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. in the HUB Auditorium on campus there will be a free screening of NEFARIOUS: Merchant of Souls,  a hard-hitting documentary that exposes the disturbing trends in modern sex slavery. From the very first scene, the film ushers your into the nightmare of sex slavery that hundreds of thousands experience daily. Viewers will see where slaves are sold (often in developed, affluent countries), where they work, and where they are confined through first-hand interviews with real victims and traffickers, along with expert analysis from international humanitarian leaders.

This event is sponsored by the Center for Ethics and Religious Affairs (CERA), International Justice Mission (Penn State Chapter), Demand, and Burning Hearts. Doors open at 6:30pm. Refreshments and a short discussion will follow the film.

RELATED: You can view the movie at streamingmoviesright.com

Penn State Students Planning THON Fundraising Trip

Penn State Students: Our first THON canning (fundraising) weekend is coming up in two weeks (Sept. 30th-Oct. 2). Please post on our Facebook page if you are interested in making the trip with the Orthodox Christian Fellowship to New Jersey and when you need to return (Saturday night or Sunday afternoon after church).

Volunteers Needed

Shane and Maria Stevens request volunteers to perform some light handiwork to finish their house for their new baby’s arrival. Tasks include patching nail holes, touching up paint, other light tasks, and moving furniture. If you can help for a few minutes any evening this week or weekend, please contact Shane. The Stevens Family thanks you!

Altar Server’s Retreat and Lunch To Be Held Saturday

All Orthodox boys eight years of age and up are invited to attend Holy Trinity’s annual altar servers’ retreat on Saturday, September 17 from 10 a.m. to approximately 1 p.m. at the church. In addition to rehearsing the movements for liturgy, our acolytes will enjoy a refresher in fire safety, a time for fellowship, and a lunch together. This is an excellent opportunity for boys who have never served to discover if this ministry would be a good fit for them. Fathers are also welcome to bring their sons early for breakfast (9 a.m.) and stay for Men’s Fellowship during the retreat.

On the Exaltation of the Cross

by St. John Maximovitch

This month, we will sing the well-known hymn, “O Lord, save Thy people and bless Thine inheritance. Grant victory to the Orthodox Christians over their adversaries, and by the virtue of Thy Cross, preserve Thy habitation.” St. John of Shanghai (+1966) explains its meaning.

The beginning of this prayer is taken from the twenty-seventh Psalm. In the Old Testament the word “people” designated only those who confessed the true faith, people faithful to God. “Inheritance” referred to everything which properly belonged to God, God’s property, which in the New Testament is the Church of Christ. In praying for the salvation of God’s people (the Christ-ians), both from eternal torments and from earthly calamities, we beseech the Lord to bless, to send down grace, His good gifts upon the whole Church as well, and inwardly stren-gthen her.

The petition for granting “victory” … (i.e., to the bearers of Supreme auth-ority), has its basis in Psalm 143:10 and recalls the victories of King David achieved by God’s power, and likewise the victories granted Emperor Const-antine through the Cross of the Lord.

This appearance of the Cross made emperors who had formerly persecuted Christians into defenders of the Church from her external enemies, into “external bishops,” to use the expression of the holy Emperor Constantine. The Church, inwardly strong by God’s grace and protected outwardly, is, for Orthodox Christians, “the city of God.” Heavenly Jerusalem has its beginning.

Related:
Led by Cross Procession, First Chapel of the Holy Spirit Service Held on New Land

Various calamities have shaken the world, entire peoples have disappeared, cities and states have perished, but the Church, in spite of persecutions and even internal conflicts, stands invincible; for the gates of hell shall not prevail against her (Matt. 16:18). Today, when world leaders try in vain to esta-blish order on earth, the only dependable instrum-ent of peace [is the Cross]… “the guardian of the whole world.” Before the time of Christ, the cross was an instrument of punishment; it evoked fear and aversion. But after Christ’s death on the Cross it became the instrument of our salvation.

Through the Cross, Christ destroyed the devil; from the Cross He descended into hades and, having liberated those languishing there, led them into the Kingdom of Heaven. The sign of the Cross is terr-ifying to demons and, as the sign of Christ, it is honored by Christians.

Despite Flood Closures, Dr. Engelhardt’s Talk Still On

Dr. Engelhardt’s talk is still on for tomorrow at 4 p.m. at Bucknell University. The campus was closed today (Thursday, September 8) but is reopening Friday morning; the river crested at Lewisburg at midafternoon today and is forecast to be down to still high but reasonable levels by 2 p.m. tomorrow.

Main roads accessing Bucknell should be open. But please use caution as some smaller roads could still be closed (the school district here plans to remain closed tomorrow due to concerns about some of its bus routes).

Annual Women’s Coffee and Tea Scheduled

Our Holy Trinity clergy wives (Linda, Dea, Kelly and Jennifer) will host a “Women’s Coffee and Tea” for all the women of the parish (young and old) on Saturday, November 5 from 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the Rectory (562 Lanceshire Drive in Park Forest, get directions).

The annual social is an outreach of Holy Trinity’s Women’s Ministry. For more information or for directions, please contact Matushka Linda.

View photographs from the 2010 Women’s Coffee and Tea:

no images were found

Leading Orthodox Bioethicist To Speak at Bucknell

LEWISBURG – Orthodox Christian bioethicist and physcian Dr. Tristram Engelhardt will speak on “Bioethics after Christendom” at Bucknell University on Friday, September 9 at 4 p.m. in Trout Auditorium, with discussion afterward.

In his talk, Engelhardt will explore ethical concerns in health care and western culture from a distinctly Orthodox Christian point of view. His visit through our region is being sponsored by the Diocese of Eastern Pennsylvania (Orthodox Church in America); the Orthodox Christian Fellowship at Bucknell is one of the lecture’s co-sponsors.

Dr. Engelhardt (who is both a Ph.D. and an M.D.) is a professor of philosophy at Rice and emeritus of medicine at Baylor. He is also the senior editor of the Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, Christian Bioethics, among others. Perhaps his most notable work is entitled “Foundations of Bioethics” (Oxford), which was reviewed by The New England Journal of Medicine as “one of the most brilliant books to appear in the field.”

The talk will be followed by a time of discussion.

PHP Code Snippets Powered By : XYZScripts.com