Why Do We Use Communion Spoons?

Fr. John Whiteford

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Orthodoxy Today

Rating: 5.2|Votes: 13

Why Do We Use Communion Spoons?

Fr. John Whiteford

In the Orthodox Church, Holy Communion is administered to communicants using a special spoon. Some have asked, doesn’t the 101st canon of the Council of Trullo forbid the use of Communion spoons? And why are the laity not allowed to receive Communion in the hand and from the chalice, as they did at the time of the Ecumenical Councils? Fr. John Whiteford answers these questions about the use of Communion spoons in our Orthodox Liturgy.

The Sunday of St Gregory Palamas

Archpriest Andrew Phillips

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Saints. Asceties of Piety. Church Holy Days

Rating: 10|Votes: 1

The Sunday of St Gregory Palamas

Archpriest Andrew Phillips

Why do we fast? Why do we make sacrifices? Why do we stand at long services? Why do we pray? To those of us who are beginning to doubt and waver after only two weeks of the Fast, the Church brings us an answer today.

Archbishop Joachim of Beroun: “Slavic peoples should stay together”

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Orthodoxy Today

Archbishop Joachim of Beroun: “Slavic peoples should stay together”

Archbishop Joachim of Beroun (the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia) talks about the life of this Local Orthodox Church, the difficulties it is faced with, the cooperation among the Slavic Churches and the destructiveness of schisms.

“The Miraculous Icon of Our Lady of Sitka” Lecture

Fr. John Kowalczyk

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Church History

Rating: 10|Votes: 1

“The Miraculous Icon of Our Lady of Sitka” Lecture

Fr. John Kowalczyk

On March 20, 2016, the Very Reverend John Kowalczyk, pastor of St. Michael’s Orthodox Church in Jermyn, PA delivered a lecture at Villanova University’s Connelly Center. The lecture is entitled "The Miraculous Icon of Our Lady of Sitka,” and is the first presentation in the Alaskan Exhibition Lecture Series:

Homily: The Tradition of Witness, the Witness of Desire

Rev. Gregory Jensen

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Saints. Asceties of Piety. Church Holy Days

Homily: The Tradition of Witness, the Witness of Desire

Rev. Gregory Jensen

But what we profess is not a philosophy, even if (in the hands of some) it has become an ideology. What we profess is not mere history. What we profess is human history transformed and transfigured to become Holy Tradition, the Voice of the Holy Spirit leading the Church from generation to generation.