St. Paul Antiochian Orthodox Church

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You are here: Home / Archives for St. Paul Emmaus

Orthodox Church Music: A Retreat with Richard Barrett

December 19, 2012 By St. Paul Emmaus

barrettOn March 3, 2012, a retreat on Orthodox Church Music was held at St. Paul’s, featuring Richard Barrett, Liturgical Musician and Scholar and Artistic Director of the St. John of Damascus Society.

You can download the audio by clicking on the titles below:

  • Psalterion as pulpit: The privilege, craft, and discipline of Orthodox liturgical song: The Byzantine rite provides a unique opportunity for the church singer to preach the Orthodox Christian faith in its fullness. In this talk, the practical and spiritual implications for the cantor and choir director are discussed, exploring how liturgical music is a responsibility to be honored, a skill to be learned, and a calling to be respected.
  • Mingling Prophecy With Melody: The Ethos of Orthodox Liturgical Music: St. John Chrysostom and St. Basil the Great both describe music as the sweetener that God has given us so that we will want to worship Him. How does music work in that way? What do we sing, who sings it, and why? How does Orthodox liturgical music “set the tone” for our worship? This talk discusses some fundamental musical concepts and explores how they interact with our liturgy and our faith.

Filed Under: Audio Tagged With: Church Music, Richard Barrett

Christianity and Ecology: Lessons on Sustainability from the Early Irish Sea

December 19, 2012 By St. Paul Emmaus

alfred-siewersAn outreach seminar led by Prof. Alfred Siewers of Bucknell University (Assoc. Prof. of Medieval Literature, Coordinator of the Nature and Human Communities Initiative), originally presented on November 21, 2009.

Download audio: Part 1 (Introduction by Fr. Andrew, Prof. Siewers’s lecture), Part 2 (Q&A with Prof. Siewers and Fr. Andrew)

Handout: Download

Filed Under: Audio Tagged With: Alfred Siewers, Ecology

The Missionary Apostle: The Life and Work of St. Paul

December 19, 2012 By St. Paul Emmaus

paulA parish retreat led by Bishop-elect Fr. Michael Dahulich, Dean of St. Tikhon’s Seminary, Associate Professor of New Testament, originally presented on November 14, 2009.

Download audio: Part 1, Part 2

Filed Under: Audio Tagged With: Apostle Paul, Michael Dahulich

Orthodoxy & Heterodoxy

December 19, 2012 By St. Paul Emmaus

OrthodoxyAndHeterodoxyOrthodoxy & Heterodoxy is a 7-part lecture series examining the differences between Orthodox Christianity and other religions, presented by Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick. (AFR site, RSS feed)

The series was subsequently published as a book with the same name available from Ancient Faith Publishing (formerly Conciliar Press) (also available from Amazon.com, including as an e-book). The book form is both revised and expanded from the original podcasts.

The topics are as follows:

I. Heterodoxy & Heresy (introduction)– originally presented Sept. 27, 2009

  • Part 1: Understanding the Terms
  • Part 2: The Essentials of Christian Doctrine
  • Handouts: Outline (including Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy quick references)

II. Roman Catholicism– originally presented Oct. 4, 2009

  • Part 1: Papal supremacy, papal infallibility, and the filioque addition to the Creed
  • Part 2: Purgatory, indulgences, and more
  • Handouts: Outline, Dictatus Papae

III. The Classical/Magisterial Reformation (Lutherans, Calvinists, Reformed, Zwinglians, Anglicans, Episcopalians, Methodists, Wesleyans) – originally presented on Oct. 11, 2009

  • Part 1: Sola Scriptura
  • Part 2: The Remaining Solas (Sola Fide, Sola Gratia, Solus Christus, Soli Deo Gloria)
  • Part 3: Specific Denominations
  • Handouts: Outline, Protestant Divisions, Sola Scriptura

IV. The Radical Reformation (Anabaptists, Baptists, Brethren, Amish, Mennonites, Moravians, Restorationists, Adventists) – originally presented on Oct. 25, 2009

  • Part 1: “Believer’s baptism” over against infant baptism, anti-sacramentalism, the “invisible Church,” etc.
  • Part 2: Denominations that formed after the Radical Reformation, as well as two studies in ecclesiological inheritance (Restorationists and Adventists).
  • Handouts: Outline, The Trail of Blood

V. Modern Revivalism (Pentecostalism, Charismatics, Evangelicalism, Emergents) – originally presented on Nov. 1, 2009

  • Part 1: Personal conversion, individualism, and private biblical interpretation.
  • Part 2: Lecture continuation.
  • Part 3: Holiness movement (including Pentecostalism / Charismatics), mega-churches, dispensationalism, fundamentalism, liberalism, and the “emergent” church movement.
  • Handouts: Outline, Theosis in the New Testament

VI. Non-Christian Religions (Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Shinto, Sikhism, Wicca, Neo-paganism, Zoroastrianism, Modern Gnosticism, Scientology, Animism) – originally presented on Nov. 8, 2009

  • Part 1: Judaism, Islam, Druze, Zoroastrianism, and Baha’i.
  • Part 2: Buddhism, Hinduism, Shinto, Sikhism, Wicca, Neo-paganism, Modern Gnosticism, and Scientology.
  • Handouts: Outline, Sunni/Shi’a Islam Comparison

VII. Non-Mainstream Christians (Swedenborgians, Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Unitarian Universalists, Christadelphians, Christian Science, Unification Church (“Moonies”); also includes series conclusions) – originally presented on Nov. 15, 2009

  • Part 1: Swedenborgians, Mormons, Unitarian Universalists, Christadelphians, and Christian Science.
  • Part 2: Unification Church, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and series conclusions.
  • Handouts: Outline, Unitarian Universalists celebrate pagan Solstice, Mormon Progression, Unification Church Wedding Ceremony

Filed Under: Audio Tagged With: Comparative Theology, Evangelism

Nativity 2012 Message of Bishop THOMAS

December 1, 2012 By St. Paul Emmaus

nativityBeloved in Christ,

Greetings in the name of our incarnate God and Savior, our Lord Jesus Christ!

However great the heaven of heavens may be, or the upper waters which form a roof over the celestial regions, or any heavenly place, state or order, they are no more marvellous or honourable than the cave, the manger, the water sprinkled on the infant and His swaddling clothes. For nothing done by God from the beginning of time was more beneficial to all or more divine than Christ’s nativity, which we celebrate today. (St. Gregory Palamas, “On Christmas,” The Saving Work of Christ: Sermons by Saint Gregory Palamas, p. 1)

What a truly awe-inspiring gift we receive in the Nativity of the Son of God, our great God and Savior Jesus Christ! At the beginning of the homily quoted above from St. Gregory Palamas, he says that his festal address “must be exalted therefore in accordance with the greatness of the feast” so that we can “enter into the mystery… that something of its inner power might be revealed to us.”

So often in our increasingly secularized and trivialized world, we fail even to take note of such greatness, such glory revealed to us lowly creatures by our God. But our distractions actually prevent us from entering into this mystery, and it so often passes us by. Let us therefore pause during this blessed feast and take heed of what St. Gregory tells us: “Please strive, brethren, to lift up your minds as well, that they may better perceive the light of divine knowledge, as though brightly illumined by a holy star.”

Christ is born! Glorify Him!

Yours in Christ,

Rt. Rev. Bishop THOMAS (Joseph)
Auxiliary Bishop, Diocese of Charleston, Oakland, and the Mid-Atlantic

Filed Under: News & Events Tagged With: Bishop Thomas, Nativity of Christ

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