Community Embarks on Lenten Journey: Chancellor's Meditations Podcast on Ancient Faith Radio

Chancellor's Meditations Podcast on Ancient Faith Radio

Our campus community has entered the rhythm of Great Lent, having passed the familiar signposts that mark the season: reading of pre-lenten Gospels, singing hymns from the Lenten Triodion, and finally asking for each other's mercy during the Rite of Forgiveness. Now, on the first and second days of the Great Fast, we share in a campus tradition, an intense retreat, replete with lengthy liturgical services and periods of silence, and intermittent meditations, this year given by the seminary Chancellor, Archpriest Chad Hatfield.

Father Chad's meditations, titled "Conversion of the Heart," "Life in the Kingdom," "Extending the Kingdom," and "Eucharistic Living," will be delivered to our community in Three Hierarchs Chapel over the course of the two-day retreat. They also will be podcast in the "Voices from St. Vladimir's" section of Ancient Faith Radio (AFR). Father Chad began his first meditation by urging the community to recall their vocation as "new creatures in Christ."

"Very few Orthodox Christians have the blessing that we have: to retreat from the demands of life during these two days," began Fr. Chad. "In the words of St. Paul, this is a time to remember that we are 'dead to sin and alive in Christ Jesus.' It is a time especially to remember that it is too easy in a hallowed place, like the seminary, to become merely 'paid professional holy men and women.' It is a time, instead to return to our First Love, to begin again to love God with our whole heart, mind, and soul. All we need to do so is the desire and the decisiveness to change."

Dwelling in Unity: Students from Seven Seminaries Gather for OISM

Dwelling in Unity: Students from Seven Seminaries Gather for OISM

How does one accomplish Orthodox Christian unity among jurisdictions? "One heart at a time," claims Monk Kilian (Sprecher), a St. Vladimir's seminarian who concluded his one-year term as President of the Orthodox Inter-Seminary Movement (OISM) at the annual Spring meeting of the group, which gathered on our campus over the course of Meatfare weekend. OISM is a society that encourages Orthodox Christian students from multiple seminaries to interact with each other and to learn about each other's liturgical and cultural traditions.

In addition to St. Vladimir's students who took part in OISM's Spring activities, twenty-five men and women from six other Orthodox seminaries were present, representing: Holy Trinity Seminary, Jordanville, New York; Holy Cross School of Theology, Brookline, Massachusetts; St. Tikhon's Seminary, South Canaan, Pennsylvania; St. Sophia Seminary, South Bound Brook, New Jersey; Christ the Saviour Seminary, Johnstown, Pennyslvania; and St. Herman Seminary in Kodiak, Alaska. Seminarians who gathered represented five jurisdictions: the Orthodox Church in America (OCA), the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR), the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America (GOA); the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the United States of America (Ecumenical Patriarch); and the American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Archdiocese of the U.S.A. (Ecumenical Patriarch).

Father Kilian was especially pleased that two students from Alaska could attend. "Our brothers from St. Herman's," he explained, "whose flights were sponsored by the OCA and a donation of air miles, spent an entire week with us at St. Vladimir's. They sat in on classes, visited with students, and took trips to St. Tikhon's Monastery and Seminary, as well as pari," said Fr. Kilian.

As a final note upon leaving his office, Fr. Kilian reflected, "I'm thankful for the opportunity that organizing events for OISM gave me, in learning about and reaching out to seminarians across jurisdictional and geographical lines. So much of the work towards Orthodox unity, in my humble opinion, must take place on the level of each person's heart, and the face-to-face contact of brothers and sisters in Christ that OISM provides is one step in the direction of manifesting that unity.

"I'm also thankful," he continued, "that this year we welcomed the involvement of a new seminary in our organization, St. Sophia's Ukrainian Orthodox Seminary. We also were gratified in Fall 2010 by the first hosting in many years of an OISM meeting by Christ the Saviour Seminary in Johnston, Pennsylvania. At this, our Spring meeting, I was especially pleased to have the great gift of two brothers from St. Herman's able to make the transcontinental journey to fellowship with us.

"My closing impression at the end of the Spring 2011 meeting—the end of my presidential term—comes from the words of the Psalmist: 'Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity!' (Ps 133:1). My hope is that this delight and unity will continue into the next year of OISM, and throughout all our years, as we move out into ministry and strive to make that unity manifest in all that we do," he concluded.

Look for Our Faculty in Your Area during Great Lent

Start Date



Our faculty will be delivering several retreats and homilies throughout North America during this season of Great Lent. Please check your local church listings and come to hear them when they visit your geographical area.

Archpriest John Behr, Dean

Saturday, March 12, 2011, 7 p.m., St. Joseph Church, Wheaton, IL, public lecture on "The Meaning of Icons"

Sunday, March 13, 2011, 6:30 p.m., St. George Antiochian Orthodox Church, Cicero, IL, Homilist at the Triumph of Orthodoxy Vespers

Monday & Tuesday, March 14–15, 2011, New Gracanica Monastery of the Holy Mother of God, Grayslake, IL, a clergy retreat sponsored by The Orthodox Clergy Association of Greater Chicago, with three presentations: “Through the Cross,” “For This We Were Created,” and “Glorify God in Your Body”

Sunday, March 26, 2011, St. Michael Orthodox Christian Church, Southbridge, MA, as part of a series of parish retreats, “On the Annunciation”

Friday, April 8, 2011, St. Elias Orthodox Church, Austin, TX, 6 p.m. Akathist followed by 8 p.m. lecture, "Orthodox Christianity as Paideia: Faith, Reason, and Culture in the Early Church."

Saturday, April 9, 2011, 1 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., followed by Vigil, St. Elias Orthodox Church, Austin, TX, parish lenten retreat, with three presentations on the theme, "Journey to Jerusalem."

Sunday, April 10, 2011, St. Elias Orthodox Church, Austin, TX, Homilist at the Divine Liturgy.

 

Archpriest Chad Hatfield, Chancellor

Saturday, March 12, 2011, St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Church, Syracuse, NY, retreat titled “Mary, Mysteries, and Mission.”

Sunday, March 13, 2011, St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Church, Syracuse, NY, Homilist at the Divine Liturgy and Homilist for the Sunday of Orthodoxy.

Thursday–Sunday, March 17–20, 2011, St. Herman Theological Seminary, and Holy Resurrection Cathedral, Kodiak, AK, Guest Lecturer and Homilist.

Friday, April 1, 2011, St. Nicholas Antiochian Cathedral, Brooklyn, NY, "Models of Holiness from Alaska," part of the parish's lenten series.

Saturday, April 9, 2011, St. Steven’s Serbian Orthodox Cathedral, Alhambra, CA, “M & M’s: Christian Basics,” Pan-Orthodox Young Adult Retreat.

Sunday, April 10, 2011, St. Steven’s Serbian Orthodox Cathedral, Alhambra, CA, Homilist at the Divine Liturgy.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011, St. Andrew's Antiochian Orthodox Church, Riverside, CA, Presentation after the Presanctified Liturgy, which begins at 6:30 p.m.

 

Dr. Paul Meyendorff, The Father Alexander Schmemann Professor of Liturgical Theology

Friday, March 18, 2011, 7 p.m., St. George Antiochian Orthodox Church, Little Falls, NJ, retreat titled "The Role of the Laity in the Liturgy"

 

Fr. Harry Pappas, Adjunct Professor of Pastoral Theology

Sunday, March 13, 2011, St. Mary’s Antiochian Orthodox Church in Pawtucket, RI, as guest of the Rhode Island Pan-Orthodox Clergy fellowship, "Truth Is Strongest of All," Homilist for the Sunday of Orthodoxy.

 

Dr. Albert Rossi, Adjunct Professor of Pastoral Theology

Saturday, March 5, 2011, St. Paul's Greek Orthodox Church, Irvine, CA, retreat titled "The Jesus Prayer"

Friday, Saturday, & Sunday, April 15–17, 2011, Holy Cross Seminary, Brookline, MA, workshop for CrossRoad participants, “Teaching Youth to Teach Youth: Chastity Today”

Men's Choir to Visit Church of Our Saviour in Rye, NY

Start Date



March 23, 2011 • Off-Campus Event

On Wednesday, March 23, at 6:30 p.m., our seminary Men's Choir will be singing the responses to the Presanctified Liturgy at the Church of Our Saviour Greek Orthodox Church in Rye, New York. The Men's Choir, led by Hierodeacon Philip Majkrzak, is versed in several styles of traditional church music, including Byzantine chant.

The Rev. Fr. Elias G. Villas, rector of the parish, will preside at the liturgy, and a lenten repast will be held following the service.

Dean and Chancellor Reappointed to Second Term

Dean and Chancellor

At an Academic Convocation held on our campus Monday evening, Anne Glynn Mackoul, Executive Chair of the seminary’s Board of Trustees, announced a decision by the Board to reappoint the seminary Dean, Archpriest John Behr, and Chancellor, Archpriest Chad Hatfield, to their positions for additional five-year terms, beginning in 2012. In reappointing the two leaders, said Mrs. Mackoul, the Board recognized “the considerable accomplishments and distinctive leadership” of each leader and also reconfirmed the Board’s commitment to the model of shared governance instituted at the beginning of their first terms.

In 2007 the Board devised a unique model of shared governance for the seminary, assigning to Fr. John as Dean primary responsibility for the spiritual and academic life of the school, and Fr. Chad as Chancellor primary responsibility for financial and operational leadership, but with elements of shared responsibility in all areas between the two administrators. At the same time the Board established a board position of Executive Chair, elected from among the lay trustees, to serve as a point of reference for the Board and to consult with the Dean and Chancellor.

In evaluating the strengths and achievements of these two administrators, the Board took particular note of their success as a team in leading the seminary. “Their particular gifts and personal attributes are complementary,” said Mrs. Mackoul, “allowing the seminary and its students to benefit from the best of both approaches to leadership. We could not have anticipated the financial crisis that so dramatically impacted their first years in office. The board has been gratified by their grace under pressure and clear-sighted focus on both the immediate needs of the seminary and the long-range vision and mission of St. Vladimir’s.

“We are particularly impressed,” she continued, “with the new curriculum, developed to support enhanced pastoral training and practical preparation of priests for Orthodox parishes and including new courses in missiology. We also welcome the many significant events on our campus that fulfill the seminary’s mission to serve Christ, his Church, and the world through Orthodox Christian theological education, research, and scholarship, and the promotion of inter-Orthodox cooperation.

“Many thanks also are due to the alumni, benefactors, and donors who support the seminary, both materially and in prayer,” she concluded. “The work of the seminary leadership, both past and future, would be impossible without their help.”

Fr. John, in acknowledging the renewal of his role, said, “I am very honored to be asked to serve the Church for a further term as Dean of St. Vladimir’s. Many new initiatives have been begun over recent years, and I look forward to seeing them bear fruit in the lives of our graduates and our service to the Church more generally.”

Likewise, Fr. Chad expressed his gratitude, saying, “I am thankful to the many who were part of the evaluation process which contributed to the decision of our Board of Trustees to offer a second five-year term to both the Dean and Chancellor. Much of our first term was dominated by our institutional response to the economic challenges of our time. I expect this to continue in the second term, but an equally strong force driving the agenda will be this administration’s determination to keep SVOTS the leading Orthodox seminary in both pastoral formation and academic excellence. I look forward to meeting the great opportunities God will provide for us.”

In Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, and non-Orthodox contexts, the profile of St. Vladimir’s had been raised by various initiatives of the current administrative team. In particular, the Board noted international scholarly campus colloquia on the subjects: “Rome, Constantinople, and Canterbury: Mother Churches” (2008); “The Council and the Tomos: Twentieth-century Landmarks towards a Twenty-first-century Church” (2009); and “Hellenism & Orthodoxy” (2010); and major events, such as the recent concert performance of the St. Matthew Passion, which drew a diverse audience of over one thousand persons to the heart of Manhattan. Especially notable was the reception of the prestigious “Unity of Orthodox Peoples Award,” presented to the school by His Holiness Kirill, patriarch of Moscow and all Russia, in 2010.

Faculty member Dr. Paul Meyendorff, The Father Alexander Schmemann Professor of Liturgical Theology at the seminary, commented on these efforts, saying, “The faculty is deeply appreciative of the efforts of Frs. John and Chad in leading the seminary through this challenging era in the life of the seminary and the Orthodox Church, and we offer them our strong support."

Theodore Bazil, the seminary's Associate Chancellor for Advancement, also congratulated the Dean and Chancellor. "With more than forty years of institutional and working history behind me, I can attest to the leadership demonstrated by the previous deans, faculty, and administration at St. Vladimir's. Based on the strength of their character and unique talents, Fr. Chad and Fr. John have proven they are eminently prepared to continue to follow this remarkable tradition as the seminary faces new challenges to articulate and witness to the faith in a secular society," said Mr. Bazil.

Particularly gratifying to the Board was the strong support of the students for the renewal, who were invited to comment during the evaluation process. The Student Body, through their Student Council President, Aaron Oliver, expressed their congratulations to the Dean and Chancellor. “On behalf of the Student Council, I would like to congratulate Fr. John and Fr. Chad on their appointment to a new term. Their complementary leadership has done much to support student life and formation at the seminary, and also to usher in a new era of student involvement and initiative,” said Seminarian Oliver.

Honorary Doctorate Bestowed upon Metropolitan Krystof

Honorary Doctorate Bestowed upon Metropolitan Krystof

At an Academic Convocation Monday evening, the seminary's Board of Trustees honored His Beatitude Metropolitan Krystof, primate of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands and Slovakia, by bestowing upon him a Doctor of Divinity degree, honoris causa, in recognition of his theological, missionary, and pastoral gifts, which have been instrumental in revitalizing the Church in his homeland. At the same convocation, the Executive Chair of the Board, Anne Glynn Mackoul, also announced the reappointments of the seminary Dean, Archpriest John Behr, and the seminary Chancellor, Archpriest Chad Hatfield, to another five-year term, beginning in 2012.

His Beatitude Metropolitan Jonah, primate of the Orthodox Church in America (OCA) and president of the seminary's Board of Trustees, opened the convocation. Additionally, on behalf of the Orthodox Church in America, Metropolitan Jonah presented "The Order of Saint Innocent" medal to Metropolitan Krystof, for "supporting Orthodox unity" throughout the world.

The seminary's Chancellor, Archpriest Chad Hatfield, welcomed the campus community and distinguished guests to the convocation—which included His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion, the First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia (ROCOR); His Eminence Justinian, archbishop of the Russian Orthodox Church in the USA (Moscow Patriarchate); His Grace Nikon, bishop of Boston, New England, and the Albanian Archdiocese (OCA); and His Grace Melchisedek, bishop of Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania (OCA)—and introduced Metropolitan Krystof as the main speaker for the evening. In his welcoming remarks, Fr. Chad expressed his interest in a continued dialogue "on the important topic of  theological education" between St. Vladimir's Seminary and Metropolitan Krystof, which, he said, "had begun during this first visit of His Beatitude to our school." Dr. John Barnet, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs at the seminary, then read the honorary citation, granting the degree of Doctor of Divinity upon Metropolitan Krystof.

In his address to those gathered to honor him, Metropolitan Krystof recounted the history of Christianity and the Orthodox faith in the Czech Lands and Slovakia—emphasizing the durable memory of the evangelization of those countries by Ss. Cyril and Methodius—and, as well, painted a picture of the ongoing evangelical work of the Church in post-modern society. Humbly, he noted his election "by lot" as primate of his Church in 2006, saying, "It is anything but an honor to be the head of an autocephalous Church; it is, rather, an obedience and a service."

His Beatitude Metropolitan Krystof was in the United States on an official visit to the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR), as the guest of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion. Besides his visit to St. Vladimir's, Metropolitan Krystof visited Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, NY, and officiated at the Divine Liturgy at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Sign in New York City. Additionally, he met with His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. Following the Academic Convocation at St. Vladimir's, he met with the Chancellor and the faculty and Board of the seminary at a private reception. The seminary Dean, Archpriest John Behr, was absent from the convocation, due to his presence in Rome at the Pontifical Oriental Institute, where he was delivering the "Sir Daniel and Countess Bernadine Murphy Donohue Chair in Eastern Catholic Theology" annual lecture.

Metropolitan Krystof was born "Radim Pulets" in Praque in 1953. He studied at the Orthodox Theological Faculty in Presov, Czechoslovakia, after which he completed graduate studies at the Moscow Theological Academy and at the Theological Faculty of the University of Athens, Greece. In 1985 he was tonsured to monastic orders at the Holy Trinity-Saint Sergius Monastery in Sergiev-Posad, Russia, taking the name of "Krystof" (Christopher). Two years later, he was elevated to the rank of archimandrite, and he served at Prague's Cathedral of Ss. Cyril and Methodius. In 1988, Metropolitan Dorotheus presided at his consecratioin to the episcopacy and election as Bishop of Olomouc and Brno. After the repose of Metropolitan Dorotheus in 2000, he was named Archbishop of Prague and the Czech Lands, and he oversaw the work of that Church's Metropolitan Council. He then was elected by council delegates in 2006, to become the fifth Primate of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands and Slovakia, which was granted autocephaly by the Patriarch of Moscow in 1951.

Orthodox Christianity and Higher Education Conference

Start Date



Register Now!

A pan-Orthodox steering committee of scholars and academics is sponsoring a conference on our seminary campus, to explore the possibility of the establishment of a new Orthodox College in North America. Recognizing the increasing desire, and longstanding need, for greater collegiality, familiarity, and scholarly collaboration among Orthodox academics, the committee invites all who are interested in thinking about Orthodoxy and higher education to attend this conference. The conference schedule may be found here. (Look for updates as meeting rooms are assigned. Any changes in speakers will also be updated, should they arise.)

Presentations will be short, 10–15 minutes each, in order to lend the conference the character of a genuine workshop. Orthodox scholars from four different countries and more than a dozen states will be presenting their thoughts on the topic.

The cost for the full conference, including room and board, is $225; for the full conference program and meals only (accommodations off campus), the fee is $150; for the full conference program only (no meals and accommodations off campus), the fee is $50. Single day conference registration will be $30 for Friday, and $15 per day for Thursday and/or Saturday.  Cost for meals per day is $45. Accommodations on the seminary campus will be available on a first-come, first-served basis for $50 per night. For those participants wishing air conditioning and further amenities, please reserve rooms at nearby hotels. Transportation to and from hotels will not be provided.  To register for the conference, click here.

Queries may be directed to the attention of Matushka Tamara Patterson, tamara.j.patterson@gmail.com.

Download the attached flyer and schedule of the Orthodox Christianity and Higher Education Conference, and share it on your social networks with your family, parish family, and friends.

The Orthodox Christianity and Higher Education Conference will be held concordantly with 2011 Summer Programs being sponsored by St. Vladimir’s Seminary on our seminary campus. Find travel directions on our Website.

His Beatitude Krystof to Receive Honorary Doctorate during Visit

Start Date



On Monday, February 28th at 5 p.m., His Beatitude, Metropolitan Krystof, primate of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands and Slovakia, will receive an honorary Doctor of Divinity degree at an Academic Convocation held in his honor on our campus. His Beatitude will deliver an address to the seminary community during the cermonious occasion. The convocation, which is open to the public, will be held in the Metropolitan Philip Auditorium of the John G. Rangos Family Building.

"To receive a primate of an autocephalous Orthodox Church at our school is a rare blessing," said Archpriest Chad Hatfield, chancellor of St. Vladimir's. "His Beatitude, who is fluent in English, is known for his many academic pursuits and for his role as the Chief Pastor of a Church that in many ways mirrors the interests of our American Orthodox parishes. We look forward to his visit."

His Beatitude is in the United States on an official visit to the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR), and he will be greeted in New York by His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion, the First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church. Besides his visit to St. Vladimir's, he will also visit Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, NY; will officiate at the Divine Liturgy at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Sign in New York City; and will meet with His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. At St. Vladimir's, he will meet with our Dean, Archpriest John Behr, and our Chancellor, Archpriest Chad Hatfield, and the faculty and students of the seminary.

Metropolitan Krystof was born "Radim Pulets" in Praque in 1953. He studied at the Orthdoox Theological Faculty in Presov, Czechoslovakia, after which he completed graduate studies at the Moscow Theological Academy and at the Theological Faculty of the University of Athens, Greece. In 1985 he was tonsured to monastic orders at the Holy Trinity-Saint Sergius Monastery in Sergiev-Posad, Russia, taking the name of "Krystof." Two years later, he was elevated to the rank of archimandrite, and he served at Prague's Cathedral of Ss. Cyril and Methodius. In 1988, Metropolitan Dorotheus presided at his consecratioin to the episcopacy and election as Bishop of Olomouc and Brno. After the repose of Metropolitan Dorotheus in 2000, he was named Archbishop of Prague and the Czech Lands, and he oversaw the work of the Church's Metropolitan Council. He then was elected by council delegates to become the fifth Primate of the Orthodox Church in the Czech Lands and Slovakia, which was granted autocephaly by the Patriarch of Moscow in 1951.

Find us on Google Maps!

Father Sergius Halvorsen Joins Faculty, Institutes Homiletics Course and D.Min. Hybrid Program

Sergius Halvorsen

By Deborah (Malacky) Belonick

“Renewing St. Vladimir’s commitment to the formation and continuing education of Orthodox Christian priests, I am pleased to make public the hiring of Fr. Sergius Halvorsen, who will teach homiletics to our student body and who also will develop a D.Min. hybrid program that will provide nourishment to pastors ‘in the trenches,’ ” announced seminary Dean, Archpriest John Behr.

"I am thrilled that Fr. Sergius is joining our faculty,” continued Fr. John. “We will now be able to offer the finest instruction in homiletics possible, being, in fact, the only Orthodox Christian seminary to have a full-time faculty position in that discipline. We also will be the first Orthodox institution in North America to offer the hybrid D.Min. program. I am really excited about these and all the other educational developments that we will see coming to fruition within the next few years at our school.”

Those “developments” include an intentional pastoral focus to enrich the education of seminarians on campus and priests in parishes who will serve or who now serve churches in North America. “We are first and foremost concerned about all seminary graduates who are ‘working on the ground,’ and our primary goal at St. Vladimir’s is to offer them the coursework and programs they need to fulfill their pastoral ministries,” Fr. John emphasized.

Father Sergius, a 1996 alumnus of St. Vladimir’s who in 2002 earned his doctorate from Drew University in Liturgical Studies with an emphasis in Homiletics, will be assuming a full-time, tenure-track position at the seminary Fall semester 2011, as “Assistant Professor of Homiletics and Rhetoric.” Initially, he will teach two core courses per semester, Homiletics and Christian Education, and will develop electives in his areas of expertise. Additionally, he will serve as Director of Field Education, overseeing training programs in prison, hospital, and parish ministry. While teaching and directing field education, Fr. Sergius also will begin to prepare a proposal for a new D.Min. program, designed to be a hybrid distance-residential learning program.

Fr. Sergius gained significant expertise in developing distance learning programs while working at Holy Apostles College and Seminary, where he was employed from 2000 to 2011, and where he held the positions of Assistant Professor of Patristics and Rhetoric, and Director of Distance Learning. There, Fr. Sergius oversaw the change from a “correspondence course” model, in which email was used instead of surface mail, to a “second generation” model, in which technology and broadband Internet access were used to create communities of teachers and learners. The program has enjoyed great success; currently, the distance learning program at Holy Apostles has more than three hundred students, with more than one hundred and fifty students enrolling in courses each semester.

Fr. Sergius, in transitioning from his position at Holy Apostles and to St. Vladimir’s, envisions a distance-residential learning program specifically designed to be accessible to clergy throughout the United States. Especially, he noted that the hybrid program to be designed will address the issue of proximity to the seminary campus, a factor that caused the demise of a once-vibrant D.Min. program in previous decades at St. Vladimir’s.

“It had been difficult to maintain the viability of an on-campus D.Min. program due to the fact that the pool of potential students—Orthodox clergy living within driving distance of the seminary—was relatively small. However, offering the program as a hybrid vastly increases the number of potential students,” Fr. Sergius explained. “As a hybrid distance-residential program, Orthodox clergy can earn a D.Min. without having to relocate to Yonkers, by doing the majority of their study via distance learning. Yet, they will also benefit from spending time among the local SVOTS community during regular on-campus intensives.

“There are a number of preliminary steps required before we can formally begin the D.Min. program,” he further stated. “In the coming months we will be conducting surveys to assess potential interest in the D.Min. as a hybrid program. Part of this survey work will be to determine which ‘majors’ are the most interesting to potential students. D.Min. majors could include, but are not limited to: pastoral counseling, parish revitalization, homiletics, and missiology.  Further, the surveys will help us determine if there are other majors that are of interest to potential students. 

“It is absolutely essential for the program that we offer the majors that are most helpful to our clergy and that will most strengthen their ministries,” concluded Fr. Sergius. “Once we identify the best majors, we will work out the specifics of the program and ensure that the new program is in compliance with the American Association of Theological Schools (ATS) and with New York State authorities. We hope that the first class of D.Min. students in this hybrid program will begin their studies in Fall semester 2012, which means that students could begin registering in the spring of 2012.”

Note: Future D.Min. applicants must hold an M.Div. and have five years of pastoral ministry experience. Visit our Website regularly to review the progress of the program.

Public Lenten Retreat: “Back to Basics: Old Testament & Life”

Start Date



This year’s public lenten retreat on Saturday, April 2, 2011, will take participants “Back to Basics” in an exploration of the biblical books of Genesis, Proverbs, and Isaiah. The Very Rev. Dr. Harry Pappas, adjunct professor of Pastoral Theology at our seminary and retreat master for the day, will be examining the overall theme, "Back to Basics: Old Testament & Life."

Father Harry bases his teaching of homiletics and pastoral theology on his seminary training at Holy Cross School of Theology, graduate work in biblical studies at Harvard and Yale, and more than twenty years of pastoral experience. He has served as deacon in New Haven, Connecticut; interim pastor in Kingston, New York; and pastor in Enfield, Connecticut, Nashville, Tennessee, and Minneapolis, Minnesota. He also worked as a part-time associate at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church in New Rochelle, where he drew large crowds to his scriptural studies classes. Currently, he is the pastor at Archangels Church, Stamford, Connecticut, a parish of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

His particular interests in parish work include Bible study, preaching, worship, contemplative prayer, pan-Orthodox cooperation, and ministry development, especially social outreach and missions. He has made multiple trips to Project Mexico’s St. Innocent Orphanage in Mexico and the Hogar Rafael Orphanage in Guatemala. He has taught at Yale Divinity School, Holy Cross, and the Resurrection of Christ Seminary in Albania.

The schedule for the day and campus venues are as follows:

“Back to Basics:  Old Testament & Life”

  9:00 AM   Divine Liturgy in Three Hierarchs Chapel

10:15 AM   Brunch in Kunnett Auditorium, Three Hierarchs Chapel lower level

11:00 AM   1st Meditation, Discussion, & Break:  "How Life Begins (Genesis)" in Met. Philip Auditorium, John G. Rangos Family Building, top level

12:30 PM   2nd Meditation, Discussion, & Break: "How Life Works (Proverbs)" in Met. Philip Auditorium, John G. Rangos Family Building, top level

  2:00 PM   3rd Meditation, Discussion, & Break: "How New Life Appears (Isaiah)" in  Met. Philip Auditorium, John G. Rangos Family Building, top level

 

Participants may register for the retreat online for a fee of $10, which includes Brunch.

For further information, please contact events@svots.edu, or call 914-961-8313 X351.

Download a PDF of the retreat and share it with your friends, family, and parish family!

Find us on Google Maps!

Subscribe to