Our parish is honoring the great men and women that have given their lives for our country’s freedom by celebrating the Divine liturgy at 9 a.m. on Memorial Day. We invite all to come and pray for them and give thanks to God for our country and those who have, or are actively, protecting our freedoms. May God grant those who gave their lives for us blessed repose and eternal memory!
Following liturgy the parish is having a work day to address the projects on the outside of the church building. “All hands on deck!” We could use you and your family and friends to help with paint preparation, wood repair, etc. We will have lunch with burgers and hot dogs prepared on the grill, watermelon and more. Come join us and share your God-given talents to repair our parish building. Meanwhile enjoy the socialization with others as we perform God’s work. May God bless you.
Saturday liturgy canceled – May 10, 2014
The 5 p.m. divine liturgy is canceled for Saturday, May 10. Father Bryan is in Ohio and Father Kappes is not able to substitute. The next Divine Liturgy is 10 a.m. on Sunday, May 11, Mother’s Day. The 3rd Hour is being celebrated on Sunday at 9:45 a.m. prior to the Divine Liturgy, as usual. Following Liturgy there will be brunch served by the men of the parish. Come celebrate Mother’s Day here at St. Athanasius the Great and socialize with all in St. Mary’s Hall. Have a great weekend!
Pascha Bread
Pascha Bread is a sweet, egg-rich round bread made for Pascha Sunday (Easter.) It is typically blessed in church on Pascha morning and is one of the traditional foods in the Easter Basket. A decorated pascha bread is a stunning centerpiece for your Easter dinner table. At St. Athanasius we took a tried-and-true recipe, Aunt Julia’s Pascha Bread, and improved on it. While we won’t “spill the beans” as to the exact recipe we will tell you about the modifications. Namely,
- substitute some honey for a portion of the sugar – for flavor, and honey is a natural preservative
- Add citrus – produces a wonderful aroma and elegant taste
- Let it rise 3 times before baking – adds depth of flavor but takes longer
When making lots of paschas how do you tell which ones have raisins?
Answer: We put 3 raisins in the bottom of the container. Why 3? The Trinity!
Holy Week and Bright Week Schedule 2014
Great and Holy Week and Bright Week 2014
SAT. APR. 12 LAZARUS SATURDAY
10 AM CHURCH AND HALL CLEAN UP
5 PM VESPERS WITH DIVINE LITURGY
6:15 PM MYSTERY OF HOLY REPENTANCE [CONFESSIONS]
SUN. APR. 13 PALM [FLOWERY] SUNDAY. THE ENTRANCE OF OUR LORD INTO JERUSALEM.
9:45 AM THIRD HOUR [BLESSING OF PALMS AND PUSSYWILLOWS]
10 AM DIVINE LITURGY
11:30 AM PARISH SOCIAL [DEMOSTRATION OF PALM WEAVING]
1:15 PM PALM SUNDAY LENTEN VESPERS
TUE. APR. 15 GREAT AND HOLY TUESDAY
9 AM BRIDEGROOM MORNING PRAYER
7 PM LITURGY OF THE PRE-SANCTIFIED GIFTS
WED. APR. 16 GREAT AND HOLY WEDNESDAY
9 AM BRIDEGROOM MORNING PRAYER
7 PM LITURGY OF THE PRE-SANCTIFIED GIFTS
[WITH MYSTERY OF HOLY ANOINTING]
THUR. APR. 17 GREAT AND HOLY THURSDAY
7 PM VESPERS & LITURGY OF THE LORD’S SUPPER
FRI. APR. 18 GREAT AND HOLY FRIDAY
12 NOON THE CHANTING OF THE PASSION GOSPELS
7 PM VESPERS AND BURIAL SERVICE
8 PM TO 12 MIDNIGHT VIGIL AT THE TOMB
SAT. APR. 19 GREAT AND HOLY SATURDAY
10 AM SETTING UP OF CHURCH AND HALL FOR THE HOLY PASCHA
EVERYONE’S HELP IS NEEDED!
SUN. APR. 20 THE HOLY PASCHA ~ THE RESURRECTION
10 AM PROCESSION & RESURRECTION MATINS
DIVINE LITURGY
BLESSING OF PASCHAL FOODS [PLEASE PLACE BASKETS IN THE FRONT OF THE CHURCH ON THE TABLES PROVIDED, BEFORE DIVINE SERVICES BEGIN!]
12 NOON PASCHAL LUNCHEON
1:30 PM PASCHAL EVENING PRAYER [AGAPE VESPERS]
MON. APR. 21 BRIGHT MONDAY
9 AM FESTAL DIVINE LITURGY
TUE. APR. 22 BRIGHT TUESDAY
9 AM FESTAL DIVINE LITURGY
7 PM FESTAL EVENING PRAYER FOR FEAST OF ST. GEORGE
WED. APR. 23 BRIGHT WEDNESDAY & FEAST OF ST. GEORGE
9 AM PASCHAL THIRD HOUR
10 AM FESTAL DIVINE LITURGY
7 PM WELCOME OF PILGRIMAGE ICON
AKATHIST TO THE THEOTOKOS
THU. APR. 24 BRIGHT THURSDAY
9 AM FESTAL DIVINE LITURGY
7 PM MOLEBEN FOR THE VICTIMS OF ABORTION
FRI. APR. 25 BRIGHT FRIDAY
9 AM PASCHAL THIRD HOUR
10 AM FESTAL DIVINE LITURGY
SAT. APR. 26 BRIGHT SATURDAY
5 PM VESPERS WITH DIVINE LITURGY
6:15 PM MYSTERY OF HOLY REPENTANCE [CONFESSIONS]
SUN. APR. 27 THOMAS SUNDAY
9:45 AM THIRD HOUR
10 AM DIVINE LITURGY
11:30 AM PARISH THOMAS SUNDAY POTLUCK LUNCHEON
Knights of Columbus Brunch – Flowery Sunday – April 13, 2014
The Knights of Columbus Council 13850 at St. Athanasius cordially invites everyone in the greater Indianapolis area to enjoy brunch with us. On the menu: salmon, scrambled eggs, pyrohy (potato-cheese, potato-onion, potato-garlic, lekvar, sauerkraut), fruit salad, vegetable salad, and ethnic pastries made by church volunteers. This meal follows the 9:45 3rd Hour, 10 a.m. procession with the blessed palms and pussy willow and Divine Liturgy.
Pascha breads, nut rolls, biscotti, and much more will be available for purchase – just in time for your Easter basket and Easter dinner, which will be one week away.
During brunch, or after, we will show you how to weave your blessed palms. See what we weaved last year.
Knights of Columbus Brunch – Flowery Sunday – April 13, 2014Read More
Our Lady of Czestochowa icon upcoming visit
The announcements have been in our bulletin, in the Parma Eparchy‘s Horizons newspaper and on Catholic radio. We ask that you spread the word that the icon of Our Lady of Czestochowa is coming to our parish during Bright Week that follows Pascha (Easter.) It will be at St. Athanasius the Great parish in Indianapolis from Wednesday, April 23rd through Friday, April 25th. See the flyer for the detailed schedule since it will be at a few locations during those 3 days. Plan to come to the many services Father Eyman will be celebrating.
Human Life International is sponsoring the “Ocean to Ocean Pilgrimage” in defense of life. Their website is tracking where the icon has been and where it’s going during the tour throughout North America.
Miriam Jemeli Kosgei visits St. Athanasius Parish
Karibu………..Karibu sana by Judith Ernst, parishioner
The members of St. Athanasius the Great Byzantine Catholic Church (St. As), Indianapolis, Indiana welcomed Miriam Jemeli Kosgei, from Kenya, this past January 31-February 2 when she was visiting Judy Ernst. It was a trip of “firsts” for Miriam…..first time in the USA, first time to worship in a Byzantine Catholic Church, first time to experience snow as we know it in the mid-west, first time cooking for a group of hungry Hoosiers.
Yes, Miriam provided a Kenyan feast after the Divine Liturgy on both Saturday evening and Sunday morning. Everyone enjoyed the simple, yet very fresh, homemade meal that is the mainstay of Kenyan households. The menu included pinto beans, ndengu (pronounced “deng – oo”), chapatti (pronounced cha-pa-ti), rice, fried cabbage and a fruit salad of mangos, bananas, and pineapple.
Miriam started cooking in the St. A’s kitchen on Friday making the chapatti, the Kenyan version of a flour tortilla, and soaking the beans.
She returned on Saturday to boil the beans and then stir fry them in olive oil with sautéed onions, garlic, tomatoes, carrots, sweet green peppers and a sprinkle of chumvi (choom-vi) also known as salt. The ndengu, a small green legume, native to Kenya, were prepared in a like manner. Both received the secret ingredient that is traditional to Kenyan cuisine; a blend of spices spiked with coriander and cardamom.
The cabbage was also sautéed in olive oil with onions, tomatoes, carrots, sweet green peppers, pepper and chumvi. The secret to cabbage (Kenyan style) is the very finely cut vegetables, only a trace of oil and final preparation just prior to serving. The chapatti were warmed, rolled and cut in half, on a diagonal, and used like a spoon to scoop up the legumes and cabbage when eating. Eating without utensils is the traditional and most sanitary way to eat in rural Kenya as long as one’s hands are clean.
After our meal on Sunday, Miriam joined St. A’s parishioners in listening to the Liturgy and Life Presentation by Very Rev. Protopresbyter Bryan R. Eyman, Pastor. Before she left St. A’s, Miriam thanked all for the opportunity to cook for everyone. In Swahili that is “asante sana” (a-sa-n-tae sa- na) or thank you very much. She also invited parishioners to visit her in Kenya.
Judy met Miriam about 8 years ago while doing work in Kenya as a nutrition researcher and also volunteer work for Cherish Our Children International (COCI-pronounced “KOSI”). Over the years, Miriam has hosted Judy in her home and cooked her a similar Kenyan meal numerous times during her visits. This past year in April, 2013, Miriam became the first international member of the Board of Directors of COCI and she and Judy, also a Board member, split the cost of her ticket to travel to the board meeting held in Houston, Texas in January. COCI, a 501c3 organization committed to “Creating Brighter Futures for the World’s Most Vulnerable Children” celebrated in September of this year, 20 years of changing lives of the world’s most vulnerable children living in desperate situations. COCI supports a number of projects all over the world in which Kenya is one of them. Other countries include Serbia, Bosnia, Mexico and the United States. Miriam attended her first COCI Board meeting in Serbia in June, 2013 and met the children whose lives are impacted by COCI.
COCI has been in Kenya since 2000. Efforts there include the establishment of Children First Organization (CFO) a NGO that supported 17 orphans in Kisumu, the building of a pre-school with a capacity of 100 vulnerable children in Nyalenda slums in Kisumu which provided not only education, but also nutrition and medical care to the children, and supported 51 vulnerable children through an Outreach Program in Bondo. COCI expanded its efforts in Kenya in 2012 and now supports an SOS house, House No.3, in the new Kisumu SOS Village. The house like all other houses in the village has a capacity of 10 children. There are currently 8 children in house No. 3, two more are expected at any time to fill the remaining capacity. COCI fully supports the approach taken by SOS to provide a ‘mama’ in every house. Indeed it is impressive to know that ‘mamas’ remain mothers to these children throughout their lives.
During her board membership thus far, Miriam has spearheaded the development of COCI-Kenya, a newly forming NGO in Kenya that will allow Kenyan support for the Kenyan projects and programs. Miriam has established a COCI-Kenya Board of Directors and they have begun fundraising for the children in House No. 3 in the Kisumu SOS Village. When Miriam is not volunteering her time, she solves communication problems as an engineer for the leading internet provider in Kenya.
Judy shares “It was not until my third trip to Kenya that the light bulb went off in my head and I realized that Karibu pronounced (car-i-boo) has two meanings in Swahili. When one enters a home in Kenya, the host’s greeting is “karibu” which means “welcome….please enter my house”. Alternatively when one is thanked for a kindness extended, (asante in Swahili), the response is also “karibu” which means “you are welcome”. When someone says “asante sana” or “thank you very much” the response is “karibu sana” or “you are most welcome”. Karibu, in both contexts, were extended to Miriam.” First we welcomed her into our Temple and our Fellowship Hall and second we extended our “you are very welcome” (karibu sana) when she thanked us for allowing her to worship with us and to cook for us. Miriam mentioned that the highlight of her first trip to the US was the hospitality that she experienced at St. Athanasius and the opportunity to prepare a meal that everyone enjoyed eating.
Father Bryan R. Eyman on Catholic Radio – week of March 24 and April 7
This morning, at 10 a.m., Catholic Radio 89.1’s “Faith in Action” program broadcast the interview with Father Eyman, our pastor, and Eric Slaughter of Indy’s Pro-Life Ministry. They are promoting the upcoming Tour of the Icon of Our Lady of Czestochowa to Indianapolis, which will be on display at our parish, Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral and Our Lady of All Who Sorrows. Also Father Bryan was discussing his vocation story, the differences in The Great Fast vs. Lent, the use of icons vs. statues and more.
The “Faith in Action” radio show is heard Mondays and Fridays at 10 AM, Tuesday and Thursday at 4 PM, and Saturday at 9 AM. You can listen to the first of two interviews online later this week and the 2nd interview during week of April 7 here at those times. In Indianapolis area you can listen to Catholic Radio on 89.1 and 90.0 FM.
4/2/2014: Podcasts of 1st interview and 2nd interview are now available.
Father Bryan R. Eyman on Catholic Radio – week of March 24 and April 7Read More
Vespers and Divine Liturgy for Cheesefare – March 1, 2014
Cheesefare Sunday is March 2, 2014. On the previous evening both Vespers and Divine Liturgy will celebrated at St. Athanasius the Great parish at 5 p.m. on Saturday, March 1, 2014. We welcome the singing group Laetare who will be singing the responses to the prayers being offered by our pastor, Father Bryan Eyman during this combined liturgical service.
Laetare is a vocal ensemble based in Bloomington, Indiana, and dedicated to the enrichment of liturgical life. Laetare take their name (which means, “Rejoice!”) from the introit for the fourth Sunday of Lent.
Please come and join us as we worship God in the Byzantine Catholic tradition. All are welcome. Invite your family and friends.
2014-Mar-1 Cheesefare Vespers Liturgy flyer
Vespers and Divine Liturgy for Cheesefare – March 1, 2014Read More
Holy Supper – December 24, 2013
At 5 p.m. on Christmas eve the parish will be celebrating Holy Supper in the parish hall. For a description of some of the traditions, menu and recipes see the following pamphlet from the Greek Catholic Union:
Christmas Eve in the Carpathian Highlands
Following the non-meat Holy Supper everyone is expected to attend the beautiful Great Compline & Lityja service at 8 p.m.
On Christmas day the Divine Liturgy for the feast of the Nativity of our Lord will be celebrated following the short 9:45 a.m. Third Hour service.
Come and join us at all these events. Everyone is welcome.
The Christmas greeting is: “Christ is Born!” response: “Glorify Him!”